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3 points by eds 6100 days ago | link | parent

> Compose does not work with macros.

Exactly what do mean? Macros seem to work in functional position at least.

  arc> (and:or nil t)
  t
> But really, what improvement in readability do you get with the 'block style?

I agree with you on this. 'block doesn't really remove parens, it just moves them around and removes the nested structure. According to pg's Ansi Common Lisp, "Lisp programmers read and write code by indentation, not by parentheses." I find nested code to be more readable than flat code for exactly that reason, even if the parens stack up at the end of the block.



1 point by almkglor 6100 days ago | link

This is because the expression:

  (and:or nil t)
expands to:

  (and (or nil t))
But the expression:

  (idfn and:or)
Expands to:

  (idfn (compose and or))
If you read my comment well, you'll see that I specifically mentioned that:

> You see, foo:bar in function position is handled specially:

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2 points by absz 6100 days ago | link

Actually, I believe what's happening is that

  (and:or nil t)
becomes

  ((compose and or) nil t)
, which is then expanded to

  (and (or nil t))
by ac.scm. Observe:

  arc> ((compose and or) nil t)
  t

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1 point by absz 6100 days ago | link

As almkglor observed, compose is handled specially in functional position, being expanded during compilation. Observe:

  arc> (and:or '(nil t))
  (nil t)
  arc> (apply and:or '(nil t))
  Error: "Function call on inappropriate object #3(tagged mac #<procedure>) (nil t)"

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2 points by eds 6100 days ago | link

Which is exactly what I meant by "macros seem to work in functional position." But amkglor's original statement "compose does not work with macros" does not take into account the special treatment of 'compose in functional position, which is why I was confused.

And if I am not mistaken, first class macros, once implemented, could be used in other situations like your example above.

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3 points by absz 6100 days ago | link

Looking at alkmglor's comment, it appears to indicate that a literal compose doesn't work; when it's optimized out, it works fine. In other words, everyone is vehemently agreeing with each other ;)

And of course, first class macros could do this. But we don't have those yet…

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