| 1 | \chapter{\CFA{} Existing Features}
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| 2 | \label{c:existing}
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| 3 | 
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| 4 | \CFA is an open-source project extending ISO C with
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| 5 | modern safety and productivity features, while still ensuring backwards
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| 6 | compatibility with C and its programmers.  \CFA is designed to have an
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| 7 | orthogonal feature-set based closely on the C programming paradigm
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| 8 | (non-object-oriented), and these features can be added incrementally to an
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| 9 | existing C code-base,
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| 10 | allowing programmers to learn \CFA on an as-needed basis.
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| 11 | 
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| 12 | Only those \CFA features pertaining to this thesis are discussed.
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| 13 | A familiarity with
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| 14 | C or C-like languages is assumed.
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| 15 | 
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| 16 | \section{Overloading and \lstinline{extern}}
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| 17 | \CFA has extensive overloading, allowing multiple definitions of the same name
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| 18 | to be defined~\cite{Moss18}.
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| 19 | \begin{cfa}
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| 20 | char i; int i; double i;
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| 21 | int f(); double f();
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| 22 | void g( int ); void g( double );
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| 23 | \end{cfa}
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| 24 | This feature requires name mangling so the assembly symbols are unique for
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| 25 | different overloads. For compatibility with names in C, there is also a syntax
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| 26 | to disable name mangling. These unmangled names cannot be overloaded but act as
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| 27 | the interface between C and \CFA code.  The syntax for disabling/enabling
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| 28 | mangling is:
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| 29 | \begin{cfa}
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| 30 | // name mangling on by default
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| 31 | int i; // _X1ii_1
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| 32 | extern "C" {  // disables name mangling
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| 33 |         int j; // j
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| 34 |         extern "Cforall" {  // enables name mangling
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| 35 |                 int k; // _X1ki_1
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| 36 |         }
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| 37 |         // revert to no name mangling
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| 38 | }
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| 39 | // revert to name mangling
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| 40 | \end{cfa}
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| 41 | Both forms of @extern@ affect all the declarations within their nested lexical
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| 42 | scope and transition back to the previous mangling state when the lexical scope
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| 43 | ends.
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| 44 | 
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| 45 | \section{Reference Type}
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| 46 | \CFA adds a reference type to C as an auto-dereferencing pointer.
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| 47 | They work very similarly to pointers.
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| 48 | Reference-types are written the same way as pointer-types, but each
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| 49 | asterisk (@*@) is replaced with a ampersand (@&@);
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| 50 | this includes cv-qualifiers (\snake{const} and \snake{volatile})
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| 51 | and multiple levels of reference.
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| 52 | 
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| 53 | Generally, references act like pointers with an implicit dereferencing
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| 54 | operation added to each use of the variable.
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| 55 | These automatic dereferences may be disabled with the address-of operator
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| 56 | (@&@).
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| 57 | 
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| 58 | % Check to see if these are generating errors.
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| 59 | \begin{minipage}{0,5\textwidth}
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| 60 | With references:
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| 61 | \begin{cfa}
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| 62 | int i, j;
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| 63 | int & ri = i;
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| 64 | int && rri = ri;
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| 65 | rri = 3;
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| 66 | &ri = &j;
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| 67 | ri = 5;
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| 68 | \end{cfa}
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| 69 | \end{minipage}
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| 70 | \begin{minipage}{0,5\textwidth}
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| 71 | With pointers:
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| 72 | \begin{cfa}
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| 73 | int i, j;
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| 74 | int * pi = &i
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| 75 | int ** ppi = π
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| 76 | **ppi = 3;
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| 77 | pi = &j;
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| 78 | *pi = 5;
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| 79 | \end{cfa}
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| 80 | \end{minipage}
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| 81 | 
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| 82 | References are intended to be used when the indirection of a pointer is
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| 83 | required, but the address is not as important as the value and dereferencing
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| 84 | is the common usage.
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| 85 | Mutable references may be assigned to by converting them to a pointer
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| 86 | with a @&@ and then assigning a pointer to them, as in @&ri = &j;@ above.
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| 87 | 
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| 88 | \section{Operators}
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| 89 | 
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| 90 | \CFA implements operator overloading by providing special names, where
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| 91 | operator expressions are translated into function calls using these names.
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| 92 | An operator name is created by taking the operator symbols and joining them with
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| 93 | @?@s to show where the arguments go.
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| 94 | For example,
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| 95 | infixed multiplication is @?*?@, while prefix dereference is @*?@.
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| 96 | This syntax makes it easy to tell the difference between prefix operations
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| 97 | (such as @++?@) and postfix operations (@?++@).
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| 98 | 
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| 99 | As an example, here are the addition and equality operators for a point type.
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| 100 | \begin{cfa}
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| 101 | point ?+?(point a, point b) { return point{a.x + b.x, a.y + b.y}; }
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| 102 | int ?==?(point a, point b) { return a.x == b.x && a.y == b.y; }
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| 103 | {
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| 104 |         assert(point{1, 2} + point{3, 4} == point{4, 6});
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| 105 | }
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| 106 | \end{cfa}
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| 107 | Note that this syntax works effectively as a textual transformation;
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| 108 | the compiler converts all operators into functions and then resolves them
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| 109 | normally. This means any combination of types may be used,
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| 110 | although nonsensical ones (like @double ?==?(point, int);@) are discouraged.
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| 111 | This feature is also used for all builtin operators as well,
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| 112 | although those are implicitly provided by the language.
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| 113 | 
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| 114 | %\subsection{Constructors and Destructors}
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| 115 | In \CFA, constructors and destructors are operators, which means they are
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| 116 | functions with special operator names, rather than type names as in \Cpp.
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| 117 | Both constructors and destructors can be implicity called by the compiler,
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| 118 | however the operator names allow explicit calls.
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| 119 | % Placement new means that this is actually equivant to C++.
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| 120 | 
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| 121 | The special name for a constructor is @?{}@, which comes from the
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| 122 | initialization syntax in C, \eg @Example e = { ... }@.
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| 123 | \CFA generates a constructor call each time a variable is declared,
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| 124 | passing the initialization arguments to the constructor.
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| 125 | \begin{cfa}
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| 126 | struct Example { ... };
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| 127 | void ?{}(Example & this) { ... }
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| 128 | {
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| 129 |         Example a;
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| 130 |         Example b = {};
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| 131 | }
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| 132 | void ?{}(Example & this, char first, int num) { ... }
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| 133 | {
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| 134 |         Example c = {'a', 2};
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| 135 | }
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| 136 | \end{cfa}
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| 137 | Both @a@ and @b@ will be initalized with the first constructor,
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| 138 | @b@ because of the explicit call and @a@ implicitly.
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| 139 | @c@ will be initalized with the second constructor.
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| 140 | Currently, there is no general way to skip initialization.
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| 141 | % I don't use @= anywhere in the thesis.
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| 142 | 
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| 143 | % I don't like the \^{} symbol but $^\wedge$ isn't better.
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| 144 | Similarly, destructors use the special name @^?{}@ (the @^@ has no special
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| 145 | meaning).
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| 146 | \begin{cfa}
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| 147 | void ^?{}(Example & this) { ... }
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| 148 | {
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| 149 |         Example d;
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| 150 |         ^?{}(d);
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| 151 | 
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| 152 |         Example e;
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| 153 | } // Implicit call of ^?{}(e);
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| 154 | \end{cfa}
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| 155 | 
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| 156 | Whenever a type is defined, \CFA creates a default zero-argument
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| 157 | constructor, a copy constructor, a series of argument-per-field constructors
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| 158 | and a destructor. All user constructors are defined after this.
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| 159 | 
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| 160 | \section{Polymorphism}
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| 161 | \CFA uses parametric polymorphism to create functions and types that are
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| 162 | defined over multiple types. \CFA polymorphic declarations serve the same role
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| 163 | as \Cpp templates or Java generics. The ``parametric'' means the polymorphism is
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| 164 | accomplished by passing argument operations to associate \emph{parameters} at
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| 165 | the call site, and these parameters are used in the function to differentiate
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| 166 | among the types the function operates on.
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| 167 | 
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| 168 | Polymorphic declarations start with a universal @forall@ clause that goes
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| 169 | before the standard (monomorphic) declaration. These declarations have the same
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| 170 | syntax except they may use the universal type names introduced by the @forall@
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| 171 | clause.  For example, the following is a polymorphic identity function that
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| 172 | works on any type @T@:
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| 173 | \begin{cfa}
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| 174 | forall( T ) T identity( T val ) { return val; }
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| 175 | int forty_two = identity( 42 );
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| 176 | char capital_a = identity( 'A' );
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| 177 | \end{cfa}
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| 178 | Each use of a polymorphic declaration resolves its polymorphic parameters
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| 179 | (in this case, just @T@) to concrete types (@int@ in the first use and @char@
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| 180 | in the second).
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| 181 | 
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| 182 | To allow a polymorphic function to be separately compiled, the type @T@ must be
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| 183 | constrained by the operations used on @T@ in the function body. The @forall@
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| 184 | clause is augmented with a list of polymorphic variables (local type names)
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| 185 | and assertions (constraints), which represent the required operations on those
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| 186 | types used in a function, \eg:
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| 187 | \begin{cfa}
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| 188 | forall( T | { void do_once(T); } )
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| 189 | void do_twice(T value) {
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| 190 |         do_once(value);
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| 191 |         do_once(value);
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| 192 | }
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| 193 | \end{cfa}
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| 194 | 
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| 195 | A polymorphic function can be used in the same way as a normal function.  The
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| 196 | polymorphic variables are filled in with concrete types and the assertions are
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| 197 | checked. An assertion is checked by verifying each assertion operation (with
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| 198 | all the variables replaced with the concrete types from the arguments) is
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| 199 | defined at a call site.
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| 200 | \begin{cfa}
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| 201 | void do_once(int i) { ... }
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| 202 | int i;
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| 203 | do_twice(i);
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| 204 | \end{cfa}
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| 205 | Any value with a type fulfilling the assertion may be passed as an argument to
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| 206 | a @do_twice@ call.
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| 207 | 
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| 208 | Note, a function named @do_once@ is not required in the scope of @do_twice@ to
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| 209 | compile it, unlike \Cpp template expansion. Furthermore, call-site inferencing
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| 210 | allows local replacement of the specific parametric functions needs for a
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| 211 | call.
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| 212 | \begin{cfa}
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| 213 | void do_once(double y) { ... }
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| 214 | int quadruple(int x) {
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| 215 |         void do_once(int & y) { y = y * 2; }
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| 216 |         do_twice(x);
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| 217 |         return x;
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| 218 | }
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| 219 | \end{cfa}
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| 220 | Specifically, the complier deduces that @do_twice@'s T is an integer from the
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| 221 | argument @x@. It then looks for the most specific definition matching the
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| 222 | assertion, which is the nested integral @do_once@ defined within the
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| 223 | function. The matched assertion function is then passed as a function pointer
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| 224 | to @do_twice@ and called within it.
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| 225 | The global definition of @do_once@ is ignored, however if @quadruple@ took a
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| 226 | @double@ argument, then the global definition would be used instead as it
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| 227 | would then be a better match.\cite{Moss19}
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| 228 | 
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| 229 | To avoid typing long lists of assertions, constraints can be collected into
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| 230 | a convenient package called a @trait@, which can then be used in an assertion
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| 231 | instead of the individual constraints.
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| 232 | \begin{cfa}
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| 233 | trait done_once(T) {
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| 234 |         void do_once(T);
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| 235 | }
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| 236 | \end{cfa}
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| 237 | and the @forall@ list in the previous example is replaced with the trait.
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| 238 | \begin{cfa}
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| 239 | forall(dtype T | done_once(T))
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| 240 | \end{cfa}
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| 241 | In general, a trait can contain an arbitrary number of assertions, both
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| 242 | functions and variables, and are usually used to create a shorthand for, and
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| 243 | give descriptive names to, common groupings of assertions describing a certain
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| 244 | functionality, like @summable@, @listable@, \etc.
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| 245 | 
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| 246 | Polymorphic structures and unions are defined by qualifying an aggregate type
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| 247 | with @forall@. The type variables work the same except they are used in field
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| 248 | declarations instead of parameters, returns and local variable declarations.
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| 249 | \begin{cfa}
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| 250 | forall(dtype T)
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| 251 | struct node {
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| 252 |         node(T) * next;
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| 253 |         T * data;
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| 254 | };
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| 255 | node(int) inode;
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| 256 | \end{cfa}
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| 257 | The generic type @node(T)@ is an example of a polymorphic type usage.  Like \Cpp
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| 258 | template usage, a polymorphic type usage must specify a type parameter.
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| 259 | 
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| 260 | There are many other polymorphism features in \CFA but these are the ones used
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| 261 | by the exception system.
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| 262 | 
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| 263 | \section{Control Flow}
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| 264 | \CFA has a number of advanced control-flow features: @generator@, @coroutine@,
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| 265 | @monitor@, @mutex@ parameters, and @thread@.
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| 266 | The two features that interact with
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| 267 | the exception system are @coroutine@ and @thread@; they and their supporting
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| 268 | constructs are described here.
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| 269 | 
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| 270 | \subsection{Coroutine}
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| 271 | A coroutine is a type with associated functions, where the functions are not
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| 272 | required to finish execution when control is handed back to the caller.
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| 273 | Instead,
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| 274 | they may suspend execution at any time and be resumed later at the point of
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| 275 | last suspension.
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| 276 | Coroutine
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| 277 | types are not concurrent but share some similarities along with common
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| 278 | underpinnings, so they are combined with the \CFA threading library.
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| 279 | % I had mention of generators, but they don't actually matter here.
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| 280 | 
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| 281 | In \CFA, a coroutine is created using the @coroutine@ keyword, which is an
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| 282 | aggregate type like @struct,@ except the structure is implicitly modified by
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| 283 | the compiler to satisfy the @is_coroutine@ trait; hence, a coroutine is
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| 284 | restricted by the type system to types that provide this special trait.  The
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| 285 | coroutine structure acts as the interface between callers and the coroutine,
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| 286 | and its fields are used to pass information in and out of coroutine interface
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| 287 | functions.
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| 288 | 
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| 289 | Here is a simple example where a single field is used to pass (communicate) the
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| 290 | next number in a sequence.
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| 291 | \begin{cfa}
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| 292 | coroutine CountUp {
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| 293 |         unsigned int next;
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| 294 | };
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| 295 | CountUp countup;
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| 296 | \end{cfa}
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| 297 | Each coroutine has a @main@ function, which takes a reference to a coroutine
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| 298 | object and returns @void@.
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| 299 | %[numbers=left] Why numbers on this one?
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| 300 | \begin{cfa}
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| 301 | void main(CountUp & this) {
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| 302 |         for (unsigned int next = 0 ; true ; ++next) {
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| 303 |                 this.next = next;
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| 304 |                 suspend;$\label{suspend}$
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| 305 |         }
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| 306 | }
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| 307 | \end{cfa}
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| 308 | In this function, or functions called by this function (helper functions), the
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| 309 | @suspend@ statement is used to return execution to the coroutine's caller
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| 310 | without terminating the coroutine's function.
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| 311 | 
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| 312 | A coroutine is resumed by calling the @resume@ function, \eg @resume(countup)@.
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| 313 | The first resume calls the @main@ function at the top. Thereafter, resume calls
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| 314 | continue a coroutine in the last suspended function after the @suspend@
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| 315 | statement. In this case there is only one and, hence, the difference between
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| 316 | subsequent calls is the state of variables inside the function and the
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| 317 | coroutine object.
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| 318 | The return value of @resume@ is a reference to the coroutine, to make it
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| 319 | convent to access fields of the coroutine in the same expression.
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| 320 | Here is a simple example in a helper function:
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| 321 | \begin{cfa}
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| 322 | unsigned int get_next(CountUp & this) {
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| 323 |         return resume(this).next;
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| 324 | }
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| 325 | \end{cfa}
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| 326 | 
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| 327 | When the main function returns, the coroutine halts and can no longer be
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| 328 | resumed.
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| 329 | 
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| 330 | \subsection{Monitor and Mutex Parameter}
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| 331 | Concurrency does not guarantee ordering; without ordering, results are
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| 332 | non-deterministic. To claw back ordering, \CFA uses monitors and @mutex@
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| 333 | (mutual exclusion) parameters. A monitor is another kind of aggregate, where
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| 334 | the compiler implicitly inserts a lock and instances are compatible with
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| 335 | @mutex@ parameters.
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| 336 | 
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| 337 | A function that requires deterministic (ordered) execution acquires mutual
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| 338 | exclusion on a monitor object by qualifying an object reference parameter with
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| 339 | the @mutex@ qualifier.
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| 340 | \begin{cfa}
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| 341 | void example(MonitorA & mutex argA, MonitorB & mutex argB);
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| 342 | \end{cfa}
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| 343 | When the function is called, it implicitly acquires the monitor lock for all of
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| 344 | the mutex parameters without deadlock.  This semantics means all functions with
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| 345 | the same mutex type(s) are part of a critical section for objects of that type
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| 346 | and only one runs at a time.
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| 347 | 
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| 348 | \subsection{Thread}
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| 349 | Functions, generators and coroutines are sequential, so there is only a single
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| 350 | (but potentially sophisticated) execution path in a program. Threads introduce
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| 351 | multiple execution paths that continue independently.
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| 352 | 
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| 353 | For threads to work safely with objects requires mutual exclusion using
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| 354 | monitors and mutex parameters. For threads to work safely with other threads
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| 355 | also requires mutual exclusion in the form of a communication rendezvous, which
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| 356 | also supports internal synchronization as for mutex objects. For exceptions,
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| 357 | only two basic thread operations are important: fork and join.
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| 358 | 
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| 359 | Threads are created like coroutines with an associated @main@ function:
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| 360 | \begin{cfa}
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| 361 | thread StringWorker {
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| 362 |         const char * input;
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| 363 |         int result;
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| 364 | };
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| 365 | void main(StringWorker & this) {
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| 366 |         const char * localCopy = this.input;
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| 367 |         // ... do some work, perhaps hashing the string ...
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| 368 |         this.result = result;
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| 369 | }
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| 370 | {
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| 371 |         StringWorker stringworker; // fork thread running in "main"
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| 372 | } // Implicit call to join(stringworker), waits for completion.
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| 373 | \end{cfa}
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| 374 | The thread main is where a new thread starts execution after a fork operation
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| 375 | and then the thread continues executing until it is finished. If another thread
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| 376 | joins with an executing thread, it waits until the executing main completes
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| 377 | execution. In other words, everything a thread does is between a fork and join.
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| 378 | 
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| 379 | From the outside, this behaviour is accomplished through creation and
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| 380 | destruction of a thread object.  Implicitly, fork happens after a thread
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| 381 | object's constructor is run and join happens before the destructor runs. Join
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| 382 | can also be specified explicitly using the @join@ function to wait for a
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| 383 | thread's completion independently from its deallocation (\ie destructor
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| 384 | call). If @join@ is called explicitly, the destructor does not implicitly join.
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