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3 points by akkartik 5230 days ago | link | parent

Yes that's implementable; I find this even more expressive:

  (x!deposit 50 "meh")
The implementation is simpler than waterhouse's version - just return the obj:

  (def Bank-Account (password)
    (let money 0
      (let check-pass [unless (is _ password)
                        (err "Wrong password!")]
         (obj deposit (fn (x pw)
                        (check-pass pw)
                        (++ money x))
              withdraw (fn (x pw)
                         (check-pass pw)
                         (if (< money x)
                             (err "Not enough money.")
                             (-- money x)))
              check (fn (pw)
                      (check-pass pw)
                      money)
              change-pw (fn (new-pw pw)
                          (check-pass pw)
                          (= password new-pw))))))


3 points by bogomipz 5217 days ago | link

This kind of OO with closures is a fun experiment and looks very elegant at first sight. I love the (x!deposit 50 "meh") version for its simplicity, the use of ssyntax, and the fact that you can pass x!deposit around as a first class function. Thanks to macros, you can of course easily come up with a nice syntax for the definitions:

  (defclass Bank-Account (password)
    (money 0 debt 0)
    (def check-pass (pw)
      (unless (is pw password)
        (err "Wrong password!")))
    (def deposit (x pw)
      (self!check-pass pw)
      (++ money x))
    (def withdraw (x pw)
      (self!check-pass pw)
      (if (< money x)
          (err "Not enough money.")
          (-- money x)))
    (def check (pw)
      (self!check-pass pw)
      money)
    (def change-pw (new-pw pw)
      (self!check-pass pw)
      (= password new-pw)))
However, the approach has some issues in real life use. First, every bank account instance replicates the method table and so takes up more memory the more methods the class defines, and each method is a closure that takes up memory as well. Also, this hash table obviously needs to be built every time an instance is created. Another big problem that follows from the above is that when you add or redefine methods on the class, existing instances are left with the old implementation. And there is no way to implement inheritance here.

I guess it is possible to remedy most or all of those problems by sacrifying methods as closures and instead do:

  (= bank-account-mt
    (obj check-pass (fn (self o pw)
                      (unless (is o!pw pw)
                        (err "Wrong password!")))
         deposit (fn (self o x pw)
                   (self 'check-pass pw)
                   (++ o!money x))
         withdraw (fn (self o x pw)
                    (self 'check-pass pw)
                    (if (< o!money x)
                        (err "Not enough money.")
                        (-- o!money x)))
         check (fn (self o pw)
                 (self 'check-pass pw)
                 o!money)
         change-pw (fn (self o new-pw pw)
                     (self 'check-pass pw)
                     (= o!pw new-pw))))

  (def Bank-Account (password)
    (let o (obj money 0 pw password)
      (afn (method-name . args)
        (apply (bank-account-mt method-name)
               (cons self (cons o args))))))
Again using a macro to improve readability and writability. Adding inheritance is left as an exercise for the reader.

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2 points by rocketnia 5217 days ago | link

I'm sure this doesn't surprise you, but here's a quick version of 'defclass that uses a syntax similar to your first example and an implementation similar to your second example:

  (mac defclass (name constructed-fields derived-fields . defs)
    (let mt (sym:string name '-mt)
      `(do (= ,mt (obj ,@(mappend
                           [do (case car._
                                 def  (let (name parms . body) cdr._
                                        `(,name (fn ,(cons 'self
                                                       (cons 'o parms))
                                                  ,@body)))
                                  (err:+ "An invalid 'defclass "
                                         "declaration was "
                                         "encountered."))]
                           defs)))
           (def ,name ,constructed-fields
             (let o (withs ,derived-fields
                      (obj ,@(mappend [list _ _]
                               (join constructed-fields
                                     (map car pair.derived-fields)))))
               (afn (method-name)
                 (fn args
                   (apply (,mt method-name)
                          (cons self (cons o args))))))))))
  
  (defclass Bank-Account (password)
    (money 0)
    (def check-pass (pw)
      (unless (is pw o!password)
        (err "Wrong password!")))
    (def deposit (x pw)
      self!check-pass.pw
      (++ money x))
    (def withdraw (x pw)
      self!check-pass.pw
      (when (< o!money x)
        (err "Not enough money."))
      (-- o!money x))
    (def check (pw)
      self!check-pass.pw
      o!money)
    (def change-pw (new-pw pw)
      self!check-pass.pw
      (= o!password new-pw)))

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1 point by bogomipz 5216 days ago | link

Nice, and you even changed it so x!deposit returns a function again! This does of course add some overhead since a closure is constructed every time you call a method, but still.

One thing I'm not quite happy with is that one has to write o!money. Would it somehow be possible to hide the o? Would it be possible to use !money or .money, or does the parser not allow that? And how to pass the hash table from the afn to the methods without polluting their namespaces? It could be done using a gensym, but then it is not possible to add methods to the method table outside defclass.

Perhaps doing something like this:

  (= bank-account-mt
    (obj check-pass (fn (self pw)
                      (unless (is self!ivars!pw pw)
                        (err "Wrong password!")))
         deposit (fn (self x pw)
                   self!check-pass.pw
                   (++ self!ivars!money x))
         withdraw (fn (self x pw)
                    self!check-pass.pw
                    (if (< self!ivars!money x)
                        (err "Not enough money.")
                        (-- self!ivars!money x)))
         check (fn (self pw)
                 self!check-pass.pw
                 self!ivars!money)
         change-pw (fn (self new-pw pw)
                     self!check-pass.pw
                     (= self!ivars!pw new-pw))))

  (def bank-account (password)
    (let ivars (obj money 0 pw password)
      (afn (selector)
        (if (is selector 'ivars)
            ivars
            (fn args
              (apply (bank-account-mt selector)
                     (cons self args)))))))
Then make defclass turn .foo into self!ivars!foo. Another macro could exist for (re)defining methods after the fact:

  (defmethod bank-account steal-money (x)
    (-- .money x))
Or even redefine Arc's def so you could do:

  (def bank-account!steal-money (x)
    (-- .money x))
since (bank-account 'steal-money) is not an atom and 'def could thus recognize it as different from an ordinary function definition.

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