| 1 | Proposal For Use of Virtual Tables
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| 2 | ==================================
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| 3 | 
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| 4 | The basic concept of a virtual table (vtable) is the same here as in most
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| 5 | other languages that use them. They will mostly contain function pointers
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| 6 | although they should be able to store anything that goes into a trait.
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| 7 | 
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| 8 | I also include notes on a sample implementation, which primarily exists to show
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| 9 | there is a reasonable implementation. The code samples for that are in a slight
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| 10 | pseudo-code to help avoid name mangling and keeps some CFA features while they
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| 11 | would actually be written in C.
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| 12 | 
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| 13 | Trait Instances
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| 14 | ---------------
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| 15 | 
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| 16 | Currently traits are completely abstract. Data types might implement a trait
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| 17 | but traits are not themselves data types. Which is to say you cannot have an
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| 18 | instance of a trait. This proposal will change that and allow instances of
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| 19 | traits to be created from instances of data types that implement the trait.
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| 20 | 
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| 21 | For example:
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| 22 | 
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| 23 |     trait combiner(otype T) {
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| 24 |         void combine(T&, int);
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| 25 |     };
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| 26 | 
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| 27 |     struct summation {
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| 28 |         int sum;
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| 29 |     };
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| 30 | 
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| 31 |     void ?{}( struct summation & this ) {
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| 32 |         this.sum = 0;
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| 33 |     }
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| 34 | 
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| 35 |     void combine( struct summation & this, int num ) {
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| 36 |         this.sum = this.sum + num;
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| 37 |     }
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| 38 | 
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| 39 |     trait combiner obj = struct summation{};
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| 40 |     combine(obj, 5);
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| 41 | 
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| 42 | As with `struct` (and `union` and `enum`), `trait` might be optional when
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| 43 | using the trait as a type name. A trait may be used in assertion list as
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| 44 | before.
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| 45 | 
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| 46 | For traits to be used this way they should meet two requirements. First they
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| 47 | should only have a single polymorphic type and each assertion should use that
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| 48 | type once as a parameter. Extensions may later loosen these requirements.
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| 49 | 
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| 50 | Also note this applies to the final expanded list of assertions. Consider:
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| 51 | 
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| 52 |     trait foo(otype T, otype U) {
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| 53 |         ... functions that use T once ...
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| 54 |     }
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| 55 | 
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| 56 |     trait bar(otype S | foo(S, char)) {
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| 57 |         ... functions that use S once ...
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| 58 |     }
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| 59 | 
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| 60 | In this example `bar` may be used as a type but `foo` may not.
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| 61 | 
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| 62 | When a trait is used as a type it creates a generic object which combines
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| 63 | the base structure (an instance of `summation` in this case) and the vtable,
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| 64 | which is currently created and provided by a hidden mechanism.
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| 65 | 
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| 66 | The generic object type for each trait also implements that trait. This is
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| 67 | actually the only means by which it can be used. The type of these functions
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| 68 | look something like this:
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| 69 | 
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| 70 |     void combine(trait combiner & this, int num);
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| 71 | 
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| 72 | The main use case for trait objects is that they can be stored. They can be
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| 73 | passed into functions, but using the trait directly is preferred in this case.
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| 74 | 
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| 75 |     trait drawable(otype T) {
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| 76 |         void draw(Surface & to, T & draw);
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| 77 |         Rect(int) drawArea(T & draw);
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| 78 |     };
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| 79 | 
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| 80 |     struct UpdatingSurface {
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| 81 |         Surface * surface;
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| 82 |         vector(trait drawable) drawables;
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| 83 |     };
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| 84 | 
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| 85 |     void updateSurface(UpdatingSurface & us) {
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| 86 |         for (size_t i = 0 ; i < us.drawables.size ; ++i) {
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| 87 |             draw(us.surface, us.drawables[i]);
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| 88 |         }
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| 89 |     }
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| 90 | 
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| 91 | With a more complete widget trait you could, for example, construct a UI tool
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| 92 | kit that can declare containers that hold widgets without knowing about the
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| 93 | widget types. Making it reasonable to extend the tool kit.
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| 94 | 
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| 95 | The trait types can also be used in the types of assertions on traits as well.
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| 96 | In this usage they passed as the underlying object and vtable pair as they
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| 97 | are stored. The trait types can also be used in that trait's definition, which
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| 98 | means you can pass two instances of a trait to a single function. However the
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| 99 | look-up of the one that is not used to look up any functions, until another
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| 100 | function that uses that object in the generic/look-up location is called.
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| 101 | 
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| 102 |     trait example(otype T) {
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| 103 |         bool test(T & this, trait example & that);
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| 104 |     }
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| 105 | 
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| 106 | ### Explanation Of Restrictions
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| 107 | 
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| 108 | The two restrictions on traits that can be used as trait objects are:
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| 109 | 
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| 110 | 1.  Only one generic parameter may be defined in the trait's header.
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| 111 | 2.  Each function assertion must have one parameter with the type of the
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| 112 |     generic parameter. They may or may not return a value of that type.
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| 113 | 
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| 114 | Elsewhere in this proposal I suggest ways to broaden these requirements.
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| 115 | A simple example would be if a trait meets requirement 1 but not 2, then
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| 116 | the assertions that do not satisfy the exactly one parameter requirement can
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| 117 | be ignored.
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| 118 | 
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| 119 | However I would like to talk about why these two rules are in place in the
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| 120 | first place and the problems that any exceptions to these rules must avoid.
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| 121 | 
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| 122 | The problems appear when the dispatcher function which operates on the
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| 123 | generic object.
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| 124 | 
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| 125 |     trait combiner(otype T, otype U) {
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| 126 |         void combine(T&, U);
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| 127 |     }
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| 128 | 
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| 129 | This one is so strange I don't have proper syntax for it but let us say that
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| 130 | the concrete dispatcher would be typed as
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| 131 | `void combine(combiner(T) &, combiner(U));`. Does the function that combine
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| 132 | the two underlying types exist to dispatch too?
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| 133 | 
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| 134 | Maybe not. If `combiner(T)` works with ints and `combiner(U)` is a char then
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| 135 | they could not be. It would have to enforce that all pairs of any types
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| 136 | that are wrapped in this way. Which would pretty much destroy any chance of
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| 137 | separate compilation.
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| 138 | 
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| 139 | Even then it would be more expensive as the wrappers would have to carry ids
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| 140 | that you use to look up on an <number of types>+1 dimensional table.
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| 141 | 
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| 142 | The second restriction has a similar issue but makes a bit more sense to
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| 143 | write out.
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| 144 | 
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| 145 |     trait Series(otype T) {
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| 146 |         ... size, iterators, getters ...
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| 147 |         T join(T const &, T const &);
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| 148 |     }
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| 149 | 
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| 150 | With the dispatcher typed as:
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| 151 | 
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| 152 |     Series join(Series const &, Series const &);
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| 153 | 
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| 154 | Because these instances are generic and hide the underlying implementation we
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| 155 | do not know what that implementation is. Unfortunately this also means the
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| 156 | implementation for the two parameters might not be the same. Once we have
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| 157 | two different types involved this devolves into the first case.
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| 158 | 
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| 159 | We could check at run-time that the have the same underlying type, but this
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| 160 | would likely time and space overhead and there is no clear recovery path.
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| 161 | 
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| 162 | #### Sample Implementation
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| 163 | A simple way to implement trait objects is by a pair of pointers. One to the
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| 164 | underlying object and one to the vtable.
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| 165 | 
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| 166 |     struct vtable_drawable {
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| 167 |         void (*draw)(Surface &, void *);
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| 168 |         Rect(int) (*drawArea)(void *);
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| 169 |     };
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| 170 | 
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| 171 |     struct drawable {
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| 172 |         void * object;
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| 173 |         vtable_drawable * vtable;
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| 174 |     };
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| 175 | 
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| 176 | The functions that run on the trait object would generally be generated using
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| 177 | the following pattern:
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| 178 | 
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| 179 |     void draw(Surface & surface, drawable & traitObj) {
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| 180 |         return traitObj.vtable->draw(surface, traitObj.object);
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| 181 |     }
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| 182 | 
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| 183 | There may have to be special cases for things like copy construction, that
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| 184 | might require a more significant wrapper. On the other hand moving could be
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| 185 | implemented by moving the pointers without any need to refer to the base
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| 186 | object.
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| 187 | 
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| 188 | ### Extension: Multiple Trait Parameters
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| 189 | The base proposal in effect creates another use for the trait syntax that is
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| 190 | related to the ones currently in the language but is also separate from them.
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| 191 | The current uses generic functions and generic types, this new use could be
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| 192 | described as generic objects.
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| 193 | 
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| 194 | A generic object is of a concrete type and has concrete functions that work on
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| 195 | it. It is generic in that it is a wrapper for an unknown type. Traits serve
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| 196 | a similar role here as in generic functions as they limit what the function
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| 197 | can be generic over.
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| 198 | 
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| 199 | This combines the use allowing to have a generic type that is a generic
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| 200 | object. All but one of the trait's parameters is given a concrete type,
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| 201 | conceptually currying the trait to create a trait with on generic parameter
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| 202 | that fits the original restrictions. The resulting concrete generic object
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| 203 | type is different with each set of provided parameters and their values.
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| 204 | 
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| 205 | Then it just becomes a question of where this is done. Again both examples use
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| 206 | a basic syntax to show the idea.
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| 207 | 
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| 208 |     trait iterator(virtual otype T, otype Item) {
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| 209 |         bool has_next(T const &);
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| 210 |         Item get_next(T const *);
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| 211 |     }
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| 212 | 
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| 213 |     iterator(int) int_it = begin(container_of_ints);
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| 214 | 
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| 215 | The first option is to do it at the definition of the trait. One parameter
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| 216 | is selected (here with the `virtual` keyword, but other rules like "the first"
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| 217 | could also be used) and when an instance of the trait is created all the
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| 218 | other parameters must be provided.
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| 219 | 
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| 220 |     trait iterator(otype T, otype Item) {
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| 221 |         bool has_next(T const &);
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| 222 |         Item get_next(T &);
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| 223 |     }
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| 224 | 
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| 225 |     iterator(virtual, int) int_it = begin(container_of_ints);
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| 226 | 
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| 227 | The second option is to skip a parameter as part of the type instance
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| 228 | definition. One parameter is explicitly skipped (again with the `virtual`
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| 229 | keyword) and the others have concrete types. The skipped one is the one we
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| 230 | are generic on.
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| 231 | 
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| 232 | Incidentally in both examples `container_of_ints` may itself be a generic
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| 233 | object and `begin` returns a generic iterator with unknown implementation.
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| 234 | 
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| 235 | These options are not exclusive. Defining a default on the trait allows for
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| 236 | an object to be created as in the first example. However, whether the
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| 237 | default is provided or not, the second syntax can be used to pick a
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| 238 | parameter on instantiation.
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| 239 | 
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| 240 | ### Extension: Object Access
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| 241 | This requires that the resolution scope (see below) is at the type level or
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| 242 | has explicate points with names. These are the tables and table names used
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| 243 | here.
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| 244 | 
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| 245 | The system already knows where to find the virtual table and the object. If
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| 246 | the tables have particular identities, or on the user side names, then it is
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| 247 | meaningful to check if a binding virtual table is the same* as another. The
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| 248 | main use of this is virtual table declarations also give the type they bind
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| 249 | and if a binding table matches a known table then the underlyind object in the
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| 250 | trait object must be of that type.
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| 251 | 
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| 252 | * By identity, by value would work and in some senses be more flexiable. But
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| 253 |   it would be slower and refering to further away functions would be harder.
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| 254 | 
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| 255 | This gives one of the main new features of the hierarchical use of virtual
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| 256 | tables (see below); the ability to recover the underlying object. Or a pointer
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| 257 | of the approprate type it which both reflects the implementation and gives a
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| 258 | convenent way to encode the boolean/conditional aspect of the operation which
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| 259 | is that a different virtual table might be in use.
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| 260 | 
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| 261 | There are two general ways to reperent this; a cast or a field access. The
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| 262 | cast is traditional and would definitely fit if a single pointer repersents
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| 263 | a trait object with the virtual table as part of the object. However for a
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| 264 | double pointer field access might be more approprate. By this system though
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| 265 | it is not the type that is used as the identifier but the virtual table. If
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| 266 | there is one table per type than it becomes equivilant again. Otherwise the
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| 267 | table has to be used as the identifier and the type is just a result of that
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| 268 | which seems important for syntax.
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| 269 | 
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| 270 | Hierarchy
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| 271 | ---------
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| 272 | 
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| 273 | We would also like to implement hierarchical relations between types.
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| 274 | 
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| 275 |     ast_node
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| 276 |     |-expression_node
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| 277 |     | |-operator_expression
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| 278 |     |
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| 279 |     |-statement_node
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| 280 |     | |-goto_statement
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| 281 |     |
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| 282 |     |-declaration_node
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| 283 |       |-using_declaration
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| 284 |       |-variable_declaration
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| 285 | 
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| 286 | Virtual tables by themselves are not quite enough to implement this system.
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| 287 | A vtable is just a list of functions and there is no way to check at run-time
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| 288 | what these functions, we carry that knowledge with the table.
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| 289 | 
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| 290 | This proposal adds type ids to check for position in the hierarchy and an
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| 291 | explicate syntax for establishing a hierarchical relation between traits and
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| 292 | their implementing types. The ids should uniquely identify each type and
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| 293 | allow retrieval of the type's parent if one exists. By recursion this allows
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| 294 | the ancestor relation between any two hierarchical types can be checked.
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| 295 | 
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| 296 | The hierarchy is created with traits as the internal nodes and structures
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| 297 | as the leaf nodes. The structures may be used normally and the traits can
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| 298 | be used to create generic objects as in the first section (the same
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| 299 | restrictions apply). However these type objects store their type id which can
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| 300 | be recovered to figure out which type they are or at least check to see if
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| 301 | they fall into a given sub-tree at run-time.
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| 302 | 
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| 303 | Here is an example of part of a hierarchy. The `virtual(PARENT)` syntax is
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| 304 | just an example. But when used it give the name of the parent type or if
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| 305 | empty it shows that this type is the root of its hierarchy.
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| 306 | (Also I'm not sure where I got these casing rules.)
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| 307 | 
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| 308 |     trait ast_node(otype T) virtual() {
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| 309 |         void print(T & this, ostream & out);
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| 310 |         void visit(T & this, Visitor & visitor);
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| 311 |         CodeLocation const & get_code_location(T & this);
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| 312 |     }
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| 313 | 
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| 314 |     trait expression_node(otype T) virtual(ast_node) {
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| 315 |         Type eval_type(T const & this);
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| 316 |     }
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| 317 | 
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| 318 |     struct operator_expression virtual(expression_node) {
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| 319 |         enum operator_kind kind;
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| 320 |         trait expression_node rands[2];
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| 321 |     }
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| 322 | 
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| 323 |     trait statement_node(otype T) virtual(ast_node) {
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| 324 |         vector(Label) & get_labels(T & this);
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| 325 |     }
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| 326 | 
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| 327 |     struct goto_statement virtual(statement_node) {
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| 328 |         vector(Label) labels;
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| 329 |         Label target;
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| 330 |     }
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| 331 | 
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| 332 |     trait declaration_node(otype T) virtual(ast_node) {
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| 333 |         string name_of(T const & this);
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| 334 |         Type type_of(T const & this);
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| 335 |     }
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| 336 | 
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| 337 |     struct using_declaration virtual(declaration_node) {
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| 338 |         string new_type;
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| 339 |         Type old_type;
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| 340 |     }
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| 341 | 
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| 342 |     struct variable_declaration virtual(declaration_node) {
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| 343 |         string name;
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| 344 |         Type type;
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| 345 |     }
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| 346 | 
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| 347 | This system does not support multiple inheritance. The system could be
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| 348 | extended to support it or a limited form (ex. you may have multiple parents
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| 349 | but they may not have a common ancestor). However this proposal focuses just
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| 350 | on using hierachy as organization. Other uses for reusable/genaric code or
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| 351 | shared interfaces is left for other features of the language.
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| 352 | 
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| 353 | ### Extension: Structural Inheritance
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| 354 | An extension would be allow structures to be used as internal nodes on the
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| 355 | inheritance tree. Its child types would have to implement the same fields.
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| 356 | 
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| 357 | The weaker restriction would be to convert the fields into field assertions
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| 358 | (Not implemented yet: `U T.x` means there is a field of type you on the type
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| 359 | T. Offset unknown and passed in/stored with function pointers.)
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| 360 | A concrete child would have to declare the same set of fields with the same
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| 361 | types. This is of a more functional style.
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| 362 | 
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| 363 | The stronger restriction is that the fields of the parent are a prefix of the
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| 364 | child's fields. Possibly automatically inserted. This the imperative view and
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| 365 | may also have less overhead.
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| 366 | 
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| 367 | ### Extension: Unions and Enumerations
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| 368 | Currently there is no reason unions and enumerations, in the cases they
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| 369 | do implement the trait, could not be in the hierarchy as leaf nodes.
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| 370 | 
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| 371 | It does not work with structural induction, but that could just be a compile
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| 372 | time check that all ancestors are traits or do not add field assertions.
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| 373 | 
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| 374 | #### Sample Implementation
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| 375 | The type id may be as little as:
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| 376 | 
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| 377 |     struct typeid {
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| 378 |         struct typeid const * const parent;
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| 379 |     };
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| 380 | 
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| 381 | Some linker magic would have to be used to ensure exactly one copy of each
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| 382 | structure for each type exists in memory. There seem to be special once
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| 383 | sections that support this and it should be easier than generating unique
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| 384 | ids across compilation units.
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| 385 | 
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| 386 | The structure could be extended to contain any additional type information.
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| 387 | 
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| 388 | There are two general designs for vtables with type ids. The first is to put
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| 389 | the type id at the top of the vtable, this is the most compact and efficient
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| 390 | solution but only works if we have exactly 1 vtable for each type. The second
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| 391 | is to put a pointer to the type id in each vtable. This has more overhead but
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| 392 | allows multiple vtables per type.
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| 393 | 
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| 394 |     struct <trait>_vtable {
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| 395 |         struct typeid const id;
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| 396 | 
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| 397 |         // Trait dependent list of vtable members.
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| 398 |     };
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| 399 | 
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| 400 |     struct <trait>_vtable {
 | 
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| 401 |         struct typeid const * const id;
 | 
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| 402 | 
 | 
|---|
| 403 |         // Trait dependent list of vtable members.
 | 
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| 404 |     };
 | 
|---|
| 405 | 
 | 
|---|
| 406 | One important restriction is that only one instance of each typeid in memory.
 | 
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| 407 | There is a ".gnu.linkonce" feature in the linker that might solve the issue.
 | 
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| 408 | 
 | 
|---|
| 409 | ### Virtual Casts
 | 
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| 410 | The generic objects may be cast up and down the hierarchy.
 | 
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| 411 | 
 | 
|---|
| 412 | Casting to an ancestor type always succeeds. From one generic type to another
 | 
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| 413 | is just a reinterpretation and could be implicate. Wrapping and unwrapping
 | 
|---|
| 414 | a concrete type will probably use the same syntax as in the first section.
 | 
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| 415 | 
 | 
|---|
| 416 | Casting from an ancestor to a descendent requires a check. The underlying
 | 
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| 417 | type may or may not belong to the sub-tree headed by that descendent. For this
 | 
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| 418 | we introduce a new cast operator, which returns the pointer unchanged if the
 | 
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| 419 | check succeeds and null otherwise.
 | 
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| 420 | 
 | 
|---|
| 421 |     trait SubType * new_value = (virtual trait SubType *)super_type;
 | 
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| 422 | 
 | 
|---|
| 423 | For the following example I am using the as of yet finished exception system.
 | 
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| 424 | 
 | 
|---|
| 425 |     trait exception(otype T) virtual() {
 | 
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| 426 |         char const * what(T & this);
 | 
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| 427 |     }
 | 
|---|
| 428 | 
 | 
|---|
| 429 |     trait io_error(otype T) virtual(exception) {
 | 
|---|
| 430 |         FILE * which_file(T & this);
 | 
|---|
| 431 |     }
 | 
|---|
| 432 | 
 | 
|---|
| 433 |     struct eof_error(otype T) virtual(io_error) {
 | 
|---|
| 434 |         FILE * file;
 | 
|---|
| 435 |     }
 | 
|---|
| 436 | 
 | 
|---|
| 437 |     char const * what(eof_error &) {
 | 
|---|
| 438 |         return "Tried to read from an empty file.";
 | 
|---|
| 439 |     }
 | 
|---|
| 440 | 
 | 
|---|
| 441 |     FILE * which_file(eof_error & this) {
 | 
|---|
| 442 |         return eof_error.file;
 | 
|---|
| 443 |     }
 | 
|---|
| 444 | 
 | 
|---|
| 445 |     bool handleIoError(exception * exc) {
 | 
|---|
| 446 |         io_error * error = (virtual io_error *)exc;
 | 
|---|
| 447 |         if (NULL == error) {
 | 
|---|
| 448 |             return false;
 | 
|---|
| 449 |         }
 | 
|---|
| 450 |         ...
 | 
|---|
| 451 |         return true;
 | 
|---|
| 452 |     }
 | 
|---|
| 453 | 
 | 
|---|
| 454 | ### Extension: Implicate Virtual Cast Target
 | 
|---|
| 455 | This is a small extension, even in the example above `io_error *` is repeated
 | 
|---|
| 456 | in the cast and the variable being assigned to. Using return type inference
 | 
|---|
| 457 | would allow the second type to be skipped in cases it is clear what type is
 | 
|---|
| 458 | being checked against.
 | 
|---|
| 459 | 
 | 
|---|
| 460 | The line then becomes:
 | 
|---|
| 461 | 
 | 
|---|
| 462 |     io_error * error = (virtual)exc;
 | 
|---|
| 463 | 
 | 
|---|
| 464 | #### Sample Implementation
 | 
|---|
| 465 | This cast implementation assumes a type id layout similar to the one given
 | 
|---|
| 466 | above. Also this code is definitely in the underlying C. Functions that give
 | 
|---|
| 467 | this functionality could exist in the standard library but these are meant to
 | 
|---|
| 468 | be produced by code translation of the virtual cast.
 | 
|---|
| 469 | 
 | 
|---|
| 470 |     bool is_in_subtree(typeid const * root, typeid const * id) {
 | 
|---|
| 471 |         if (root == id) {
 | 
|---|
| 472 |             return true
 | 
|---|
| 473 |         } else if (NULL == id->parent) {
 | 
|---|
| 474 |             return false;
 | 
|---|
| 475 |         } else {
 | 
|---|
| 476 |             return is_in_subtree(root, id->parent);
 | 
|---|
| 477 |         }
 | 
|---|
| 478 |     }
 | 
|---|
| 479 | 
 | 
|---|
| 480 |     void * virtual_cast(typeid const * target, void * value) {
 | 
|---|
| 481 |         return is_in_subtree(target, *(typeid const **)value) ? value : NULL;
 | 
|---|
| 482 |     }
 | 
|---|
| 483 | 
 | 
|---|
| 484 | The virtual cast function might have to be wrapped with some casts to make it
 | 
|---|
| 485 | compile without warning.
 | 
|---|
| 486 | 
 | 
|---|
| 487 | For the implicate target type we may be able to lean on the type resolution
 | 
|---|
| 488 | system that already exists. If the casting to ancestor type is built into
 | 
|---|
| 489 | the resolution then the impicate target could be decided by picking an
 | 
|---|
| 490 | overload, generated for each hierarchial type (here io_error and its root
 | 
|---|
| 491 | type exception).
 | 
|---|
| 492 | 
 | 
|---|
| 493 |     io_error * virtual_cast(exception * value) {
 | 
|---|
| 494 |         return virtual_cast(io_error_typeid, value);
 | 
|---|
| 495 |     }
 | 
|---|
| 496 | 
 | 
|---|
| 497 | ### Extension: Inline vtables
 | 
|---|
| 498 | Since the structures here are usually made to be turned into trait objects
 | 
|---|
| 499 | it might be worth it to have fields in them to store the virtual table
 | 
|---|
| 500 | pointer. This would have to be declared on the trait as an assertion (example:
 | 
|---|
| 501 | `vtable;` or `T.vtable;`), but if it is the trait object could be a single
 | 
|---|
| 502 | pointer.
 | 
|---|
| 503 | 
 | 
|---|
| 504 | There are also three options for where the pointer to the vtable. It could be
 | 
|---|
| 505 | anywhere, a fixed location for each trait or always at the front. For the per-
 | 
|---|
| 506 | trait solution an extension to specify what it is (example `vtable[0];`) which
 | 
|---|
| 507 | could also be used to combine it with others. So these options can be combined
 | 
|---|
| 508 | to allow access to all three options.
 | 
|---|
| 509 | 
 | 
|---|
| 510 | The pointer to virtual table field on structures might implicately added (the
 | 
|---|
| 511 | types have to declare they are a child here) or created with a declaration,
 | 
|---|
| 512 | possibly like the one used to create the assertion.
 | 
|---|
| 513 | 
 | 
|---|
| 514 | ### Extension: Associated Types Use
 | 
|---|
| 515 | If the `associated_types.md` proposal is accepted the following trait could
 | 
|---|
| 516 | be added:
 | 
|---|
| 517 | 
 | 
|---|
| 518 |     trait is_virtual(dtype T) {
 | 
|---|
| 519 |         dtype table;
 | 
|---|
| 520 |         // An example assertion:
 | 
|---|
| 521 |         const table & get_virtual_table(T &);
 | 
|---|
| 522 |     }
 | 
|---|
| 523 | 
 | 
|---|
| 524 | There may be more assertions but there has to be at least one way to find
 | 
|---|
| 525 | the (possibly default) virtual table. It is required to construct instances
 | 
|---|
| 526 | of the type.
 | 
|---|
| 527 | 
 | 
|---|
| 528 | Without the assotiated type it would look like this:
 | 
|---|
| 529 | 
 | 
|---|
| 530 |     trait is_virtual(dtype T, dtype table) {
 | 
|---|
| 531 |         const table & get_virtual_table(T &);
 | 
|---|
| 532 |     }
 | 
|---|
| 533 | 
 | 
|---|
| 534 | Which is just a little bit longer to use but becomes more problematic if the
 | 
|---|
| 535 | user has to explicately provide the table's name as it doesn't really have its
 | 
|---|
| 536 | own type name. If it does it is probably mangled.
 | 
|---|
| 537 | 
 | 
|---|
| 538 | ### Virtual Tables as Types
 | 
|---|
| 539 | Here we consider encoding plus the implementation of functions on it to be a
 | 
|---|
| 540 | type. Which is to say in the type hierarchy structures aren't concrete types
 | 
|---|
| 541 | anymore, instead they are parent types to vtables, which combine the encoding
 | 
|---|
| 542 | and implementation.
 | 
|---|
| 543 | 
 | 
|---|
| 544 | ### Question: Wrapping Structures
 | 
|---|
| 545 | One issue is what to do with concrete types at the base of the type tree.
 | 
|---|
| 546 | When we are working with the concrete type generally it would like them to be
 | 
|---|
| 547 | regular structures with direct calls. On the other hand for interactions with
 | 
|---|
| 548 | other types in the hierarchy it is more convenent for the type already to be
 | 
|---|
| 549 | cast.
 | 
|---|
| 550 | 
 | 
|---|
| 551 | Which of these two should we use? Should we support both and if so how do we
 | 
|---|
| 552 | choose which one is being used at any given time.
 | 
|---|
| 553 | 
 | 
|---|
| 554 | On a related note I have been using pointers two trait types here, as that
 | 
|---|
| 555 | is how many existing languages handle it. However the generic objects might
 | 
|---|
| 556 | be only one or two pointers wide passing the objects as a whole would not
 | 
|---|
| 557 | be very expensive and all operations on the generic objects probably have
 | 
|---|
| 558 | to be defined anyways.
 | 
|---|
| 559 | 
 | 
|---|
| 560 | Resolution Scope
 | 
|---|
| 561 | ----------------
 | 
|---|
| 562 | 
 | 
|---|
| 563 | What is the scope of a resolution? When are the functions in a vtable decided
 | 
|---|
| 564 | and how broadly is this applied?
 | 
|---|
| 565 | 
 | 
|---|
| 566 | ### Type Level:
 | 
|---|
| 567 | Each structure has a single resolution for all of the functions in the
 | 
|---|
| 568 | virtual trait. This is how many languages that implement this or similar
 | 
|---|
| 569 | features do it.
 | 
|---|
| 570 | 
 | 
|---|
| 571 | The main thing CFA would need to do it this way is some single point where
 | 
|---|
| 572 | the type declaration, including the functions that satisfy the trait, are
 | 
|---|
| 573 | all defined. Currently there are many points where this can happen, not all
 | 
|---|
| 574 | of them have the same definitions and no way to select one over the other.
 | 
|---|
| 575 | 
 | 
|---|
| 576 | Some syntax would have to be added to specify the resolution point. To ensure
 | 
|---|
| 577 | a single instance there may have to be two variants, one forward declaration
 | 
|---|
| 578 | and one to create the instance. With some compiler magic the forward
 | 
|---|
| 579 | declaration maybe enough.
 | 
|---|
| 580 | 
 | 
|---|
| 581 |     extern trait combiner(struct summation) vtable;
 | 
|---|
| 582 |     trait combiner(struct summation) vtable;
 | 
|---|
| 583 | 
 | 
|---|
| 584 | Or (with the same variants):
 | 
|---|
| 585 | 
 | 
|---|
| 586 |     vtable combiner(struct summation);
 | 
|---|
| 587 | 
 | 
|---|
| 588 | The extern variant promises that the vtable will exist while the normal one
 | 
|---|
| 589 | is where the resolution actually happens.
 | 
|---|
| 590 | 
 | 
|---|
| 591 | ### Explicit Resolution Points:
 | 
|---|
| 592 | Slightly looser than the above, there are explicit points where the vtables
 | 
|---|
| 593 | are resolved, but there is no limit on the number of resolution points that
 | 
|---|
| 594 | might be provided. Each time a object is bound to a trait, one of the
 | 
|---|
| 595 | resolutions is selected. This might be the most flexible option.
 | 
|---|
| 596 | 
 | 
|---|
| 597 | An syntax would have to be provided as above. There may also be the option
 | 
|---|
| 598 | to name resolution points so that you can choose between them. This also
 | 
|---|
| 599 | could come with the ability to forward declare them.
 | 
|---|
| 600 | 
 | 
|---|
| 601 | Especially if they are not named, these resolution points should be able to
 | 
|---|
| 602 | appear in functions, where the scoping rules can be used to select one.
 | 
|---|
| 603 | However this also means that stack-allocated functions can end up in the
 | 
|---|
| 604 | vtable.
 | 
|---|
| 605 | 
 | 
|---|
| 606 |     extern trait combiner(struct summation) vtable sum;
 | 
|---|
| 607 |     trait combiner(struct summation) vtable sum;
 | 
|---|
| 608 | 
 | 
|---|
| 609 |     extern trait combiner(struct summation) vtable sum default;
 | 
|---|
| 610 |     trait combiner(struct summation) vtable sum default;
 | 
|---|
| 611 | 
 | 
|---|
| 612 | The extern difference is the same before. The name (sum in the samples) is
 | 
|---|
| 613 | used at the binding site to say which one is picked. The default keyword can
 | 
|---|
| 614 | be used in only some of the declarations.
 | 
|---|
| 615 | 
 | 
|---|
| 616 |     trait combiner fee = {summation_instance, sum};
 | 
|---|
| 617 |     trait combiner foe = summation_instance;
 | 
|---|
| 618 | 
 | 
|---|
| 619 | (I am not really happy about this syntax, but it kind of works.)
 | 
|---|
| 620 | The object being bound is required. The name of the vtable is optional if
 | 
|---|
| 621 | there is exactly one vtable name marked with default.
 | 
|---|
| 622 | 
 | 
|---|
| 623 | These could also be placed inside functions. In which case both the name and
 | 
|---|
| 624 | the default keyword might be optional. If the name is omitted in an assignment
 | 
|---|
| 625 | the closest vtable is chosen (returning to the global default rule if no
 | 
|---|
| 626 | appropriate local vtable is in scope).
 | 
|---|
| 627 | 
 | 
|---|
| 628 | ### Site Based Resolution:
 | 
|---|
| 629 | Every place in code where the binding of a vtable to an object occurs has
 | 
|---|
| 630 | its own resolution. Syntax-wise this is the simplest as it should be able
 | 
|---|
| 631 | to use just the existing declarations and the conversion to trait object.
 | 
|---|
| 632 | It also is very close to the current polymorphic resolution rules.
 | 
|---|
| 633 | 
 | 
|---|
| 634 | This works as the explicit resolution points except the resolution points
 | 
|---|
| 635 | are implicit and their would be no selection of which resolution to use. The
 | 
|---|
| 636 | closest (current) resolution is always selected.
 | 
|---|
| 637 | 
 | 
|---|
| 638 | This could easily lead to an explosion of vtables as it has the most fine
 | 
|---|
| 639 | grained resolution the number of bindings in a single scope (that produces
 | 
|---|
| 640 | the same binding) could be quite high. Merging identical vtables might help
 | 
|---|
| 641 | reduce that.
 | 
|---|
| 642 | 
 | 
|---|
| 643 | Vtable Lifetime Issues
 | 
|---|
| 644 | ----------------------
 | 
|---|
| 645 | 
 | 
|---|
| 646 | Vtables interact badly with the thunk issue. Conceptually vtables are static
 | 
|---|
| 647 | like type/function data they carry, as those decisions are made by the
 | 
|---|
| 648 | resolver at compile time.
 | 
|---|
| 649 | 
 | 
|---|
| 650 | Stack allocated functions interact badly with this because they are not
 | 
|---|
| 651 | static. There are several ways to try to resolve this, however without a
 | 
|---|
| 652 | general solution most can keep vtables from making the existing thunk problem
 | 
|---|
| 653 | worse, they don't do anything to solve it.
 | 
|---|
| 654 | 
 | 
|---|
| 655 | Filling in some fields of a static vtable could cause issues on a recursive
 | 
|---|
| 656 | call. And then we are still limited by the lifetime of the stack functions, as
 | 
|---|
| 657 | the vtable with stale pointers is still a problem.
 | 
|---|
| 658 | 
 | 
|---|
| 659 | Dynamically allocated vtables introduces memory management overhead and
 | 
|---|
| 660 | requires some way to differentiate between dynamic and statically allocated
 | 
|---|
| 661 | tables. The stale function pointer problem continues unless those becomes
 | 
|---|
| 662 | dynamically allocated as well which gives us the same costs again.
 | 
|---|
| 663 | 
 | 
|---|
| 664 | Stack allocating the vtable seems like the best issue. The vtable's lifetime
 | 
|---|
| 665 | is now the limiting factor but it should be effectively the same as the
 | 
|---|
| 666 | shortest lifetime of a function assigned to it. However this still limits the
 | 
|---|
| 667 | lifetime "implicitly" and returns to the original problem with thunks.
 | 
|---|
| 668 | 
 | 
|---|
| 669 | Odds And Ends
 | 
|---|
| 670 | -------------
 | 
|---|
| 671 | 
 | 
|---|
| 672 | In addition to the main design there are a few extras that should be
 | 
|---|
| 673 | considered. They are not part of the core design but make the new uses fully
 | 
|---|
| 674 | featured.
 | 
|---|
| 675 | 
 | 
|---|
| 676 | ### Extension: Parent-Child Assertion
 | 
|---|
| 677 | For hierarchy types in regular traits, generic functions or generic structures
 | 
|---|
| 678 | we may want to be able to check parent-child relationships between two types
 | 
|---|
| 679 | given. For this we might have to add another primitive assertion. It would
 | 
|---|
| 680 | have the following form if declared in code:
 | 
|---|
| 681 | 
 | 
|---|
| 682 |     trait is_parent_child(dtype Parent, dtype Child) { <built-in magic> }
 | 
|---|
| 683 | 
 | 
|---|
| 684 | This assertion is satified if Parent is an ancestor of Child in a hierarchy.
 | 
|---|
| 685 | In other words Child can be statically cast to Parent. The cast from Parent
 | 
|---|
| 686 | to child would be dynamically checked as usual.
 | 
|---|
| 687 | 
 | 
|---|
| 688 | However in this form there are two concerns. The first that Parent will
 | 
|---|
| 689 | usually be consistent for a given use, it will not be a variable. Second is
 | 
|---|
| 690 | that we may also need the assertion functions. To do any casting/conversions
 | 
|---|
| 691 | anyways.
 | 
|---|
| 692 | TODO: Talk about when we wrap a concrete type and how that leads to "may".
 | 
|---|
| 693 | 
 | 
|---|
| 694 | To this end it may be better that the parent trait combines the usual
 | 
|---|
| 695 | assertions plus this new primitive assertion. There may or may not be use
 | 
|---|
| 696 | cases for accessing just one half and providing easy access to them may be
 | 
|---|
| 697 | required depending on how that turns out.
 | 
|---|
| 698 | 
 | 
|---|
| 699 |     trait Parent(dtype T | interface(T)) virtual(<grand-parent?>) { }
 | 
|---|
| 700 | 
 | 
|---|
| 701 | ### Extension: sizeof Compatablity
 | 
|---|
| 702 | Trait types are always sized, it may even be a fixed size like how pointers
 | 
|---|
| 703 | have the same size regardless of what they point at. However their contents
 | 
|---|
| 704 | may or may not be of a known size (if the `sized(...)` assertion is used).
 | 
|---|
| 705 | 
 | 
|---|
| 706 | Currently there is no way to access this information. If it is needed a
 | 
|---|
| 707 | special syntax would have to be added. Here a special case of `sizeof` is
 | 
|---|
| 708 | used.
 | 
|---|
| 709 | 
 | 
|---|
| 710 |     struct line aLine;
 | 
|---|
| 711 |     trait drawable widget = aLine;
 | 
|---|
| 712 | 
 | 
|---|
| 713 |     size_t x = sizeof(widget);
 | 
|---|
| 714 |     size_t y = sizeof(trait drawable);
 | 
|---|
| 715 | 
 | 
|---|
| 716 | As usual `y`, size of the type, is the size of the local storage used to put
 | 
|---|
| 717 | the value into. The other case `x` checks the saved stored value in the
 | 
|---|
| 718 | virtual table and returns that.
 | 
|---|