Arc Forumnew | comments | leaders | submit | reitzensteinm's commentslogin
3 points by reitzensteinm 6169 days ago | link | parent | on: Array, Vector ?

But surely what is important is freedom and power to express ideas, not dictate their implementation to the compiler/runtime?

If the two systems behave exactly the same (mapping keys to values), and the only penalty is execution time (which depending on how the automatic switching works, shouldn't be much), why should they be separate concepts in the language itself?

-----

1 point by nlavine 6168 days ago | link

I see your point, and you may be right. But I could respond to that: if all we're abstracting over is key/value mappings, then why do we have lists?

I think we're looking at this from different points of view. I'm thinking of a basis for the space of all data layouts in memory (so to speak), and you're thinking of having a generic interface to mappings, if I understand you right.

I have a thought that might shed some light on this, and I'd like to hear what you and everyone else think about it. It seems like we're talking about two types of maps - maps whose keys are values (hash tables), and maps whose keys are nonnegative integers (arrays, but also some uses of lists).

The difference between them is the way you think about it. Hash tables are pure associative maps, which you use in the application server to store user data for cookies, but you could also use as record types, because they're really the same thing. Maps indexed by integers, on the other hand, hold data in a sequence, like the temperatures in Durham, NC for the past month, and they tend to be variable-sized and ordered because the integers have a natural order, and because the most natural set of integers is all of them.

Are we really looking for ways to represent these two concepts?

-----

1 point by reitzensteinm 6166 days ago | link

But do we think about arrays differently because there's a legitimate reason to, or because that's just the way it has worked in other languages?

I mean, the fact that a simple:

(def array (elements) (table))

Would bridge that conceptual gap probably means that although it will feel weird using a table as an array, including arrays solely for familiarity is probably the kind of backwards compatability that Arc is looking to avoid.

You're right, we are definitely approaching this from different directions. I do think that a generic interface to mappings is the way to go, so long as the abstraction doesn't leak too much (i.e. reasonably small performance loss).

-----

1 point by reitzensteinm 6169 days ago | link | parent | on: Array, Vector ?

I think that's an excellent idea.

But for particularly performance intensive situations, it would be nice to have a function that creates a hash table that's internally already an n element array.

There are probably only a few cases where this would actually be necessary (and it should only ever be done after profiling), but when you run into one of those cases, you're in deep trouble if there's no way around it.

An example would be if you'd like to write a bucket system for a 2D or 3D set of objects, and have the system still functional. Reusing the buckets between calls would turn everything into an array quickly, but the thought of xyz hash maps realizing they should be arrays at runtime is a bit scary. Allocating arrays directly, on the other hand, should still be more than fast enough for use in real time applications.

-----

1 point by reitzensteinm 6171 days ago | link | parent | on: Clarification about Character Sets

Perhaps (++ containsnil) should result in 1 anyway? Is there any case where that would break anything?

-----

2 points by simonb 6171 days ago | link

For one it breaks the expectation of a strongly typed language.

If something goes wrong and you want to fail as soon as possible not propagate the defect through the system.

-----

1 point by reitzensteinm 6171 days ago | link

Oh, it definitely throws strong typing right out of the window.

The reason I suggested it is because it would seem that almost all of the time where you go to do an increment on a nil value, you're working with an uninitialized element (not necessarily in a hash map) and treating that as 0 (as you're doing an increment) would in a certain sense be reasonable behaviour.

But I guess you're right, in the case where nil does represent an error, it'll be two steps backwards when you go to debug the thing.

-----

1 point by william42 6164 days ago | link

Or perhaps just set containsnil to 0 when you do that. (Knowing pg, this would probably work.)

-----

3 points by reitzensteinm 6171 days ago | link | parent | on: The proposed : syntax

I agree. It removes a lot of redundant characters. There are quite a few errors in the example (unless I'm missing something), but it sure looks a lot better, and the correct syntax would remove just as many (just be formatted a little differently).

Now this'll get me stoned, but what about combining it with a bracket pair that switches on infix? Here's the canonical factorial example in 3 views, implicit brackets on indentation and infix, implicit brackets on indentation, and standard Arc:

http://pastebin.com/f7a944cd5

The infix looks nicer (to me, but I'm also a non-lisp programmer that understands how lisp works), but probably isn't worth the cost of adding a whole new language element, not to mention precidence rules into the language itself. Representing longer math though it would probably get more and more succinct. I have to say, I'm really taken with the whole implicit brackets thing. The strong Python feel helps with readability (I use Python day to day).

-----