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1\chapter{\CFA Features and Type System Interactions}
2\label{c:content1}
3
4This chapter discusses \CFA feature introduced over time by multiple people and their interactions with the type system.
5
6
7\section{Reference Types}
8
9Reference types were added to \CFA by Robert Schluntz and Aaron Moss~\cite{Moss18}.
10The \CFA reference type generalizes the \CC reference type (and its equivalent in other modern programming languages) by providing both mutable and immutable forms and cascading referencing and dereferencing.
11Specifically, \CFA attempts to extend programmer intuition about pointers to references.
12That is, use a pointer when its primary purpose is manipulating the address of storage, \eg a top/head/tail pointer or link field in a mutable data structure.
13Here, manipulating the pointer address is the primary operation, while dereferencing the pointer to its value is the secondary operation.
14For example, \emph{within} a data structure, \eg stack or queue, all operations involve pointer addresses and the pointer may never be dereferenced because the referenced object is opaque.
15Alternatively, use a reference when its primary purpose is to alias a value, \eg a function parameter that does not copy the argument (performance reason).
16Here, manipulating the value is the primary operation, while changing the pointer address is the secondary operation.
17Succinctly, if the address changes often, use a pointer;
18if the value changes often, use a reference.
19Java has mutable references but no pointers.
20\CC has mutable pointers but immutable references;
21hence, references match with functional programming.
22However, the consequence is asymmetry semantics between the pointer and reference.
23\CFA adopts a uniform policy between pointers and references where mutability is a separate property made at the declaration.
24
25The following examples shows how pointers and references are treated uniformly in \CFA.
26\begin{cfa}[numbers=left,numberblanklines=false]
27int x = 1, y = 2, z = 3;$\label{p:refexamples}$
28int * p1 = &x, ** p2 = &p1,  *** p3 = &p2,      $\C{// pointers to x}$
29        @&@ r1 = x,  @&&@ r2 = r1,   @&&&@ r3 = r2;     $\C{// references to x}$
30int * p4 = &z, & r4 = z;
31
32*p1 = 3; **p2 = 3; ***p3 = 3;                           $\C{// different ways to change x to 3}$
33 r1 =  3;       r2 = 3;         r3 = 3;                         $\C{// change x: implicit dereference *r1, **r2, ***r3}$
34**p3 = &y;      *p3 = &p4;                                              $\C{// change p1, p2}$
35// cancel implicit dereferences (&*)**r3, (&(&*)*)*r3, &(&*)r4
36@&@r3 = @&@y; @&&@r3 = @&&@r4;                          $\C{// change r1, r2}$
37\end{cfa}
38Like pointers, reference can be cascaded, \ie a reference to a reference, \eg @&& r2@.\footnote{
39\CC uses \lstinline{&&} for rvalue reference, a feature for move semantics and handling the \lstinline{const} Hell problem.}
40Usage of a reference variable automatically performs the same number of dereferences as the number of references in its declaration, \eg @r2@ becomes @**r2@.
41Finally, to reassign a reference's address needs a mechanism to stop the auto-referencing, which is accomplished by using a single reference to cancel all the auto-dereferencing, \eg @&r3 = &y@ resets @r3@'s address to point to @y@.
42\CFA's reference type (including multi-de/references) is powerful enough to describe the lvalue rules in C by types only.
43As a result, the \CFA type checker now works on just types without using the notion of lvalue in an expression.
44(\CFA internals still use lvalue for code generation purposes.)
45
46The current reference typing rules in \CFA are summarized as follows:
47\begin{enumerate}
48    \item For a variable $x$ with declared type $T$, the variable-expression $x$ has type reference to $T$, even if $T$ itself is a reference type.
49    \item For an expression $e$ with type $T\ \&_1...\&_n$, \ie $T$ followed by $n$ references, where $T$ is not a reference type, the expression $\&T$ (address of $T$) has type $T *$ followed by $n - 1$ references.
50    \item For an expression $e$ with type $T *\&_1...\&_n$, \ie $T *$  followed by $n$ references, the expression $* T$ (dereference $T$) has type $T$ followed by $n + 1$ references.
51        This rule is the reverse of the previous rule, such that address-of and dereference operators are perfect inverses.
52    \item When matching argument and parameter types at a function call, the number of references on the argument type is stripped off to match the number of references on the parameter type.\footnote{
53        \CFA handles the \lstinline{const} Hell problem by allowing rvalue expressions to be converted to reference values by implicitly creating a temporary variable, with some restrictions.
54        As well, there is a warning that the output nature of the reference is lost.
55        Hence, a single function handles \lstinline{const} and non-\lstinline{const} as constness is handled at the call site.}
56        In an assignment context, the left-hand-side operand-type is always reduced to a single reference.
57\end{enumerate}
58Under this ruleset, a type parameter is never bound to a reference type in a function-call context.
59\begin{cfa}
60forall( T ) void f( T & );
61int & x;
62f( x );  // implicit dereference
63\end{cfa}
64The call applies an implicit dereference once to @x@ so the call is typed @f( int & )@ with @T = int@, rather than with @T = int &@.
65
66As for a pointer type, a reference type may have qualifiers, where @const@ is most interesting.
67\begin{cfa}
68int x = 3; $\C{// mutable}$
69const int cx = 5; $\C{// immutable}$
70int * const cp = &x, $\C{// immutable pointer pointer/reference}$
71        & const cr = cx;
72const int * const ccp = &cx, $\C{// immutable value and pointer/reference}$
73                        & const ccr = cx;
74\end{cfa}
75\begin{cquote}
76\setlength{\tabcolsep}{26pt}
77\begin{tabular}{@{}lll@{}}
78pointer & reference & \\
79\begin{cfa}
80*cp = 7;
81cp = &x;
82*ccp = 7;
83ccp = &cx;
84\end{cfa}
85&
86\begin{cfa}
87cr = 7;
88cr = &x;
89*ccr = 7;
90ccr = &cx;
91\end{cfa}
92&
93\begin{cfa}
94// allowed
95// error, assignment of read-only variable
96// error, assignment of read-only location
97// error, assignment of read-only variable
98\end{cfa}
99\end{tabular}
100\end{cquote}
101Interestingly, C does not give a warning/error if a @const@ pointer is not initialized, while \CC does.
102Hence, type @& const@ is similar to a \CC reference, but \CFA does not preclude initialization with a non-variable address.
103For example, in system's programming, there are cases where an immutable address is initialized to a specific memory location.
104\begin{cfa}
105int & const mem_map = *0xe45bbc67@p@; $\C{// hardware mapped registers ('p' for pointer)}$
106\end{cfa}
107Finally, qualification is generalized across all pointer/reference declarations.
108\begin{cfa}
109const * const * const * const ccccp = ...
110const & const & const & const ccccr = ...
111\end{cfa}
112
113In the initial \CFA reference design, the goal was to make the reference type a \emph{real} data type \vs a restricted \CC reference, which is mostly used for choosing the argument-passing method, \ie by-value or by-reference.
114However, there is an inherent ambiguity for auto-dereferencing: every argument expression involving a reference variable can potentially mean passing the reference's value or address.
115Without any restrictions, this ambiguity limits the behaviour of reference types in \CFA polymorphic functions, where a type @T@ can bind to a reference or non-reference type.
116This ambiguity prevents the type system treating reference types the same way as other types, even if type variables could be bound to reference types.
117The reason is that \CFA uses a common \emph{object trait}\label{p:objecttrait} (constructor, destructor and assignment operators) to handle passing dynamic concrete type arguments into polymorphic functions, and the reference types are handled differently in these contexts so they do not satisfy this common interface.
118
119Moreover, there is also some discrepancy in how the reference types are treated in initialization and assignment expressions.
120For example, in line 3 of the example code on \VPageref{p:refexamples}:
121\begin{cfa}
122int @&@ r1 = x,  @&&@ r2 = r1,   @&&&@ r3 = r2; $\C{// references to x}$
123\end{cfa}
124each initialization expression is implicitly dereferenced to match the types, \eg @&x@, because an address is always required and a variable normally returns its value;
125\CC does the same implicit dereference when initializing its reference variables.
126For lines 6 and 9 of the previous example code:
127\begin{cfa}
128 r1 =  3;       r2 = 3;   r3 = 3;                               $\C{// change x: implicit dereference *r1, **r2, ***r3}$
129@&@r3 = @&@y; @&&@r3 = @&&@r4;                          $\C{// change r1, r2}$
130\end{cfa}
131there are no actual assignment operators defined for reference types that can be overloaded;
132instead, all reference assignments are handled by semantic actions in the type system.
133In fact, the reassignment of reference variables is setup internally to use the assignment operators for pointer types.
134Finally, there is an annoying issue (although purely syntactic) for setting a mutable reference to a specific address like null, @int & r1 = *0p@, which looks like dereferencing a null pointer.
135Here, the expression is rewritten as @int & r1 = &(*0p)@, like the variable dereference of @x@ above.
136However, the implicit @&@ needs to be cancelled for an address, which is done with the @*@, \ie @&*@ cancel each other, giving @0p@.
137Therefore, the dereferencing operation does not actually happen and the expression is translated into directly initializing the reference variable with the address.
138Note, the same explicit reference is used in \CC to set a reference variable to null.
139\begin{c++}
140int & ip = @*@(int *)nullptr;
141\end{c++}
142which is used in certain systems-programming situations.
143
144When generic types were introduced to \CFA~\cite{Moss19}, some thought was given to allow reference types as type arguments.
145\begin{cfa}
146forall( T ) struct vector { T t; }; $\C{// generic type}$
147vector( int @&@ ) vec; $\C{// vector of references to ints}$
148\end{cfa}
149While it is possible to write a reference type as the argument to a generic type, it is disallowed in assertion checking, if the generic type requires the object trait \see{\VPageref{p:objecttrait}} for the type argument, a fairly common use case.
150Even if the object trait can be made optional, the current type system often misbehaves by adding undesirable auto-dereference on the referenced-to value rather than the reference variable itself, as intended.
151Some tweaks are necessary to accommodate reference types in polymorphic contexts and it is unclear what can or cannot be achieved.
152Currently, there are contexts where \CFA programmer is forced to use a pointer type, giving up the benefits of auto-dereference operations and better syntax with reference types.
153
154
155\section{Tuple Types}
156
157The addition of tuples to \CFA can be traced back to the original design by David Till in \mbox{K-W C}~\cite{Till89,Buhr94a}, a predecessor project of \CFA.
158The primary purpose of tuples is to eliminate output parameters or creating an aggregate type to return multiple values from a function, called a multiple-value-returning (MVR) function.
159Traditionally, returning multiple values is accomplished via (in/)output parameters or packing the results in a structure.
160The following examples show these two techniques for a function returning three values.
161\begin{cquote}
162\begin{tabular}{@{}l@{\hspace{20pt}}l@{}}
163\begin{cfa}
164
165int foo( int &p2, int &p3 );  // in/out parameters
166int x, y = 3, z = 4;
167x = foo( y, z );  // return 3 values
168\end{cfa}
169&
170\begin{cfa}
171struct Ret { int x, y, z; };
172Ret foo( int p2, int p3 );  // multiple return values
173Ret ret = { .y = 3, .z = 4 };
174ret = foo( ret.y, ret.z );  // return 3 values
175\end{cfa}
176\end{tabular}
177\end{cquote}
178K-W C allows direct return of multiple values into a tuple.
179\begin{cfa}
180@[int, int, int]@ foo( int p2, int p3 );
181@[x, y, z]@ = foo( y, z );  // return 3 values into a tuple
182\end{cfa}
183Along with making returning multiple values a first-class feature, tuples were extended to simplify a number of other common context that normally require multiple statements and/or additional declarations, all of which reduces coding time and errors.
184\begin{cfa}
185[x, y, z] = 3; $\C[2in]{// x = 3; y = 3; z = 3, where types may be different}$
186[x, y] = [y, x]; $\C{// int tmp = x; x = y; y = tmp;}$
187void bar( int, int, int );
188bar( foo( 3, 4 ) ); $\C{// int t0, t1, t2; [t0, t1, t2] = foo( 3, 4 ); bar( t0, t1, t2 );}$
189x = foo( 3, 4 )@.1@; $\C{//  int t0, t1, t2; [t0, t1, t2] = foo( 3, 4 ); x = t1;}\CRT$
190\end{cfa}
191For the call to @bar@, the three results (tuple value) from @foo@ are \newterm{flattened} into individual arguments.
192Flattening is how tuples interact with parameter and subscript lists, and with other tuples, \eg:
193\begin{cfa}
194[ [ x, y ], z, [a, b, c] ] = [2, [3, 4], foo( 3, 4) ]  $\C{// structured}$
195[ x, y, z, a, b, c] = [2, 3, 4, foo( 3, 4) ]  $\C{// flattened, where foo results are t0, t1, t2}$
196\end{cfa}
197Note, in most cases, a tuple is just compile-time syntactic-sugar for a number of individual assignments statements and possibly temporary variables.
198Only when returning a tuple from a function is there the notion of a tuple value.
199
200Overloading in the \CFA type-system must support complex composition of tuples and C type conversions using a costing scheme giving lower cost to widening conversions that do not truncate a value.
201\begin{cfa}
202[ int, int ] foo$\(_1\)$( int );                        $\C{// overloaded foo functions}$
203[ double ] foo$\(_2\)$( int );
204void bar( int, double, double );
205bar( @foo@( 3 ), @foo@( 3 ) );
206\end{cfa}
207The type resolver only has the tuple return types to resolve the call to @bar@ as the @foo@ parameters are identical, which involves unifying the flattened @foo@ return values with @bar@'s parameter list.
208However, no combination of @foo@s is an exact match with @bar@'s parameters;
209thus, the resolver applies C conversions to obtain a best match.
210The resulting minimal cost expression is @bar( foo@$_1$@( 3 ), foo@$_2$@( 3 ) )@, where the two possible coversions are (@int@, {\color{red}@int@}, @double@) to (@int@, {\color{red}@double@}, @double@) with a safe (widening) conversion from @int@ to @double@ versus ({\color{red}@double@}, {\color{red}@int@}, {\color{red}@int@}) to ({\color{red}@int@}, {\color{red}@double@}, {\color{red}@double@}) with one unsafe (narrowing) conversion from @double@ to @int@ and two safe conversions from @int@ to @double@.
211The programming language Go provides a similar but simplier tuple mechanism, as it does not have overloaded functions.
212
213K-W C also supported tuple variables, but with a strong distinction between tuples and tuple values/variables.
214\begin{quote}
215Note that tuple variables are not themselves tuples.
216Tuple variables reference contiguous areas of storage, in which tuple values are stored;
217tuple variables and tuple values are entities which appear during program execution.
218Tuples, on the other hand, are compile-time constructs;
219they are lists of expressions, whose values may not be stored contiguously.~\cite[p.~30]{Till89}
220\end{quote}
221Fundamentally, a tuple value/variable is just a structure (contiguous areas) with an alternate (tuple) interface.
222A tuple value/variable is assignable (like structures), its fields can be accessed using position rather than name qualification, and it can interact with regular tuples.
223\begin{cfa}
224[ int, int, int ] t1, t2;
225t1 = t2;                        $\C{// tuple assignment}$
226t1@.1@ = t2@.0@;        $\C{// position qualification}$
227int x, y, z;
228t1 = [ x, y, z ];       $\C{// interact with regular tuples}$
229[ x, y, z ] = t1;
230bar( t2 );                      $\C{// bar defined above}$
231\end{cfa}
232\VRef[Figure]{f:Nesting} shows the difference is nesting of structures and tuples.
233The left \CC nested-structure is named so it is not flattened.
234The middle C/\CC nested-structure is unnamed and flattened, causing an error because @i@ and @j@ are duplication names.
235The right \CFA nested tuple cannot be named and is flattened.
236C allows named nested-structures, but they have issues \see{\VRef{s:inlineSubstructure}}.
237Note, it is common in C to have an unnamed @union@ so its fields do not require qualification.
238
239\begin{figure}
240\setlength{\tabcolsep}{20pt}
241\begin{tabular}{@{}ll@{\hspace{90pt}}l@{}}
242\multicolumn{1}{c}{\CC} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{C/\CC} & \multicolumn{1}{c}{tuple} \\
243\begin{cfa}
244struct S {
245        struct @T@ { // not flattened
246                int i, j;
247        };
248        int i, j;
249};
250\end{cfa}
251&
252\begin{cfa}
253struct S2 {
254        struct ${\color{red}/* unnamed */}$ { // flatten
255                int i, j;
256        };
257        int i, j;
258};
259\end{cfa}
260&
261\begin{cfa}
262[
263        [ // flatten
264                1, 2
265        ]
266        1, 2
267]
268\end{cfa}
269\end{tabular}
270\caption{Nesting}
271\label{f:Nesting}
272\end{figure}
273
274The primary issues for tuples in the \CFA type system are polymorphism and conversions.
275Specifically, does it make sense to have a generic (polymorphic) tuple type, as is possible for a structure?
276\begin{cfa}
277forall( T, S ) [ T, S ] GT; // polymorphic tuple type
278GT( int, char ) @gt@;
279GT( int, double ) @gt@;
280@gt@ = [ 3, 'a' ]// select correct gt
281@gt@ = [ 3, 3.5 ];
282\end{cfa}
283and what is the cost model for C conversions across multiple values?
284\begin{cfa}
285gt = [ 'a', 3L ]// select correct gt
286\end{cfa}
287
288
289\section{Tuple Implementation}
290
291As noted, tradition languages manipulate multiple values by in/out parameters and/or structures.
292K-W C adopted the structure for tuple values or variables, and as needed, the fields are extracted by field access operations.
293As well, for the tuple-assignment implementation, the left-hand tuple expression is expanded into assignments of each component, creating temporary variables to avoid unexpected side effects.
294For example, the tuple value returned from @foo@ is a structure, and its fields are individually assigned to a left-hand tuple, @x@, @y@, @z@, \emph{or} copied directly into a corresponding tuple variable.
295
296In the second implementation of \CFA tuples by Rodolfo Gabriel Esteves~\cite{Esteves04}, a different strategy is taken to handle MVR functions.
297The return values are converted to output parameters passed in by pointers.
298When the return values of a MVR function are directly used in an assignment expression, the addresses of the left-hand operands can be directly passed into the function;
299composition of MVR functions is handled by creating temporaries for the returns.
300For example, given a function returning two values:
301\begin{cfa}
302[int, int] gives_two() { int r1, r2; ... return [ r1, r2 ]; }
303int x, y;
304[x, y] = gives_two();
305\end{cfa}
306\VRef[Figure]{f:AlternateTupleImplementation} shows the two implementation approaches.
307In the left approach, the return statement is rewritten to pack the return values into a structure, which is returned by value, and the structure fields are indiviually assigned to the left-hand side of the assignment.
308In the right approach, the return statement is rewritten as direct assignments into the passed-in argument addresses.
309The right imlementation looks more concise and saves unnecessary copying.
310The downside is indirection within @gives_two@ to access values, unless values get hoisted into registers for some period of time, which is common.
311
312\begin{figure}
313\begin{cquote}
314\setlength{\tabcolsep}{20pt}
315\begin{tabular}{@{}ll@{}}
316Till K-W C implementation & Rodolfo \CFA implementation \\
317\begin{cfa}
318struct _tuple2 { int _0; int _1; }
319struct _tuple2 gives_two() {
320        ... struct _tuple2 ret = { r1, r2 };
321        return ret;
322}
323int x, y;
324struct _tuple2 _tmp = gives_two();
325x = _tmp._0; y = _tmp._1;
326\end{cfa}
327&
328\begin{cfa}
329
330void gives_two( int * r1, int * r2 ) {
331        ... *r1 = ...; *r2 = ...;
332        return;
333}
334int x, y;
335
336gives_two( &x, &y );
337\end{cfa}
338\end{tabular}
339\end{cquote}
340\caption{Alternate Tuple Implementation}
341\label{f:AlternateTupleImplementation}
342\end{figure}
343
344Interestingly, in the third implementation of \CFA tuples by Robert Schluntz~\cite[\S~3]{Schluntz17}, the MVR functions revert back to structure based, where it remains in the current version of \CFA.
345The reason for the reversion was to have a uniform approach for tuple values/variables making tuples first-class types in \CFA, \ie allow tuples with corresponding tuple variables.
346This extension was possible, because in parallel with Schluntz's work, generic types were added independently by Moss~\cite{Moss19}, and the tuple variables leveraged the same implementation techniques as the generic variables.
347\PAB{I'm not sure about the connection here. Do you have an example of what you mean?}
348
349However, after experience gained building the \CFA runtime system, making tuple-types first-class seems to add little benefit.
350The main reason is that tuples usages are largely unstructured,
351\begin{cfa}
352[int, int] foo( int, int ); $\C[2in]{// unstructured function}$
353typedef [int, int] Pair; $\C{// tuple type}$
354Pair bar( Pair ); $\C{// structured function}$
355int x = 3, y = 4;
356[x, y] = foo( x, y ); $\C{// unstructured call}$
357Pair ret = [3, 4]; $\C{// tuple variable}$
358ret = bar( ret ); $\C{// structured call}\CRT$
359\end{cfa}
360Basically, creating the tuple-type @Pair@ is largely equivalent to creating a @struct@ type, and creating more types and names defeats the simplicity that tuples are trying to achieve.
361Furthermore, since operator overloading in \CFA is implemented by treating operators as overloadable functions, tuple types are very rarely used in a structured way.
362When a tuple-type expression appears in a function call (except assignment expressions, which are handled differently by mass- or multiple-assignment expansions), it is always flattened, and the tuple structure of function parameter is not considered a part of the function signatures.
363For example,
364\begin{cfa}
365void f( int, int );
366void f( @[@ int, int @]@ );
367f( 3, 4 )// ambiguous call
368\end{cfa}
369the two prototypes for @foo@ have the same signature (a function taking two @int@s and returning nothing), and therefore invalid overloads.
370Note, the ambiguity error occurs at the call rather than at the second declaration of @f@, because it is possible to have multiple equivalent prototype definitions of a function.
371Furthermore, ordinary polymorphic type-parameters are not allowed to have tuple types.
372\begin{cfa}
373forall( T ) T foo( T );
374int x, y, z;
375[x, y, z] = foo( [x, y, z] )// substitute tuple type for T
376\end{cfa}
377Without this restriction, the expression resolution algorithm can create too many argument-parameter matching options.
378For example, with multiple type parameters,
379\begin{cfa}
380forall( T, U ) void f( T, U );
381f( [1, 2, 3, 4] );
382\end{cfa}
383the call to @f@ can be interpreted as @T = [1]@ and @U = [2, 3, 4, 5]@, or @T = [1, 2]@ and @U = [3, 4, 5]@, and so on.
384The restriction ensures type checking remains tractable and does not take too long to compute.
385Therefore, tuple types are never present in any fixed-argument function calls, because of the flattening.
386
387Finally, a type-safe variadic argument signature was added by Robert Schluntz~\cite[\S~4.1.2]{Schluntz17} using @forall@ and a new tuple parameter-type, denoted by the keyword @ttype@ in Schluntz's implementation, but changed to the ellipsis syntax similar to \CC's template parameter pack.
388For C variadics, \eg @va_list@, the number and types of the arguments must be conveyed in some way, \eg @printf@ uses a format string indicating the number and types of the arguments.
389\VRef[Figure]{f:CVariadicMaxFunction} shows an $N$ argument @maxd@ function using the C untyped @va_list@ interface.
390In the example, the first argument is the number of following arguments, and the following arguments are assumed to be @double@;
391looping is used to traverse the argument pack from left to right.
392The @va_list@ interface is walking up the stack (by address) looking at the arguments pushed by the caller.
393(Magic knowledge is needed for arguments pushed using registers.)
394
395\begin{figure}
396\begin{cfa}
397double maxd( int @count@, @...@ ) { // ellipse parameter
398    double max = 0;
399    va_list args;
400    va_start( args, count );
401    for ( int i = 0; i < count; i += 1 ) {
402        double num = va_arg( args, double );
403        if ( num > max ) max = num;
404    }
405    va_end(args);
406    return max;
407}
408printf( "%g\n", maxd( @4@, 25.0, 27.3, 26.9, 25.7 ) );
409\end{cfa}
410\caption{C Variadic Maximum Function}
411\label{f:CVariadicMaxFunction}
412\end{figure}
413
414There are two common patterns for using the variadic functions in \CFA.
415\begin{enumerate}[leftmargin=*]
416\item
417Argument forwarding to another function, \eg:
418\begin{cfa}
419forall( T *, TT ... | { @void ?{}( T &, TT );@ } ) // constructor assertion
420T * new( TT tp ) { return ((T *)malloc())@{@ tp @}@; }  // call constructor on storage
421\end{cfa}
422Note, the assertion on @T@ requires it to have a constructor @?{}@.
423The function @new@ calls @malloc@ to obtain storage and then invokes @T@'s constructor passing the tuple pack by flattening it over the constructor's arguments, \eg:
424\begin{cfa}
425struct S { int i, j; };
426void ?{}( S & s, int i, int j ) { s.[ i, j ] = [ i, j ]; }  // constructor
427S * sp = new( 3, 4 )// flatten [3, 4] into call ?{}( 3, 4 );
428\end{cfa}
429\item
430Structural recursion for processing the argument-pack values one at a time, \eg:
431\begin{cfa}
432forall( T | { int ?>?( T, T ); } )
433T max( T v1, T v2 ) { return v1 > v2 ? v1 : v2; }
434$\vspace{-10pt}$
435forall( T, TT ... | { T max( T, T ); T max( TT ); } )
436T max( T arg, TT args ) { return max( arg, max( args ) ); }
437\end{cfa}
438The first non-recursive @max@ function is the polymorphic base-case for the recursion, \ie, find the maximum of two identically typed values with a greater-than (@>@) operator.
439The second recursive @max@ function takes two parameters, a @T@ and a @TT@ tuple pack, handling all argument lengths greater than two.
440The recursive function computes the maximum for the first argument and the maximum value of the rest of the tuple pack.
441The call of @max@ with one argument is the recursive call, where the tuple pack is converted into two arguments by taking the first value (lisp @car@) from the tuple pack as the first argument (flattening) and the remaining pack becomes the second argument (lisp @cdr@).
442The recursion stops when the argument pack is empty.
443For example, @max( 2, 3, 4 )@ matches with the recursive function, which performs @return max( 2, max( [3, 4] ) )@ and one more step yields @return max( 2, max( 3, 4 ) )@, so the tuple pack is empty.
444\end{enumerate}
445
446As an aside, polymorphic functions are precise with respect to their parameter types, \eg @max@ states all argument values must be the same type, which logically makes sense.
447However, this precision precludes normal C conversions among the base types, \eg, this mix-mode call @max( 2h, 2l, 3.0f, 3.0ld )@ fails because the types are not the same.
448Unfortunately, this failure violates programmer intuition because there are specialized two-argument non-polymorphic versions of @max@ that work, \eg @max( 3, 3.5 )@.
449Allowing C conversions for polymorphic types will require a significant change to the type resolver.
450
451Currently in \CFA, variadic polymorphic functions are the only place tuple types are used.
452And because \CFA compiles polymorphic functions versus template expansion, many wrapper functions are generated to implement both user-defined generic-types and polymorphism with variadics.
453Fortunately, the only permitted operations on polymorphic function parameters are given by the list of assertion (trait) functions.
454Nevertheless, this small set of functions eventually need to be called with flattened tuple arguments.
455Unfortunately, packing the variadic arguments into a rigid @struct@ type and generating all the required wrapper functions is significant work and largely wasted because most are never called.
456Interested readers can refer to pages 77-80 of Robert Schluntz's thesis to see how verbose the translator output is to implement a simple variadic call with 3 arguments.
457As the number of arguments increases, \eg a call with 5 arguments, the translator generates a concrete @struct@ types for a 4-tuple and a 3-tuple along with all the polymorphic type data for them.
458An alternative approach is to put the variadic arguments into an array, along with an offset array to retrieve each individual argument.
459This method is similar to how the C @va_list@ object is used (and how \CFA accesses polymorphic fields in a generic type), but the \CFA variadics generate the required type information to guarantee type safety.
460For example, given the following heterogeneous, variadic, typed @print@ and usage.
461\begin{cquote}
462\begin{tabular}{@{}ll@{}}
463\begin{cfa}
464forall( T, TT ... | { void print( T ); void print( TT ); } )
465void print( T arg , TT rest ) {
466        print( arg );
467        print( rest );
468}
469\end{cfa}
470&
471\begin{cfa}
472void print( int i ) { printf( "%d ", i ); }
473void print( double d ) { printf( "%g ", d ); }
474... // other types
475int i = 3 ; double d = 3.5;
476print( i, d );
477\end{cfa}
478\end{tabular}
479\end{cquote}
480it would look like the following using the offset-array implementation approach.
481\begin{cfa}
482void print( T arg, char * _data_rest, size_t * _offset_rest ) {
483        print( arg );
484        print( *((typeof rest.0)*) _data_rest,  $\C{// first element of rest}$
485                  _data_rest + _offset_rest[0]$\C{// remainder of data}$
486                  _offset_rest + 1)$\C{// remainder of offset array}$
487}
488\end{cfa}
489where the fixed-arg polymorphism for @T@ can be handled by the standard @void *@-based \CFA polymorphic calling conventions, and the type information can all be deduced at the call site.
490Note, the variadic @print@ supports heterogeneous types because the polymorphic @T@ is not returned (unlike variadic @max@), so there is no cascade of type relationships.
491
492Turning tuples into first-class values in \CFA does have a few benefits, namely allowing pointers to tuples and arrays of tuples to exist.
493However, it seems unlikely that these types have realistic use cases that cannot be achieved without them.
494And having a pointer-to-tuple type potentially forbids the simple offset-array implementation of variadic polymorphism.
495For example, in the case where a type assertion requests the pointer type @TT *@ in the above example, it forces the tuple type to be a @struct@, and thus incurring a high cost.
496My conclusion is that tuples should not be structured (first-class), rather they should be unstructured.
497This agrees with Rodolfo's original describes
498\begin{quote}
499As such, their [tuples] use does not enforce a particular memory layout, and in particular, does not guarantee that the components of a tuple occupy a contiguous region of memory.~\cite[pp.~74--75]{Esteves04}
500\end{quote}
501allowing the simplified implementations for MVR and variadic functions.
502
503Finally, a missing feature for tuples is using an MVR in an initialization context.
504Currently, this feature is \emph{only} possible when declaring a tuple variable.
505\begin{cfa}
506[int, int] ret = gives_two()$\C{// no constructor call (unstructured)}$
507Pair ret = gives_two()$\C{// constructor call (structured)}$
508\end{cfa}
509However, this forces the programer to use a tuple variable and possibly a tuple type to support a constructor, when they actually want separate variables with separate constructors.
510And as stated previously, type variables (structured tuples) are rare in general \CFA programming so far.
511To address this issue, while retaining the ability to leverage constructors, the following new tuple-like declaration syntax is proposed.
512\begin{cfa}
513[ int x, int y ] = gives_two();
514\end{cfa}
515where the semantics is:
516\begin{cfa}
517T t0, t1;
518[ t0, t1 ] = gives_two();
519T x = t0// constructor call
520T y = t1// constructor call
521\end{cfa}
522and the implementation performs as much copy elision as possible.
523
524
525\section{\lstinline{inline} Substructure}
526\label{s:inlineSubstructure}
527
528As mentioned \see{\VRef[Figure]{f:Nesting}}, C allows an anonymous aggregate type (@struct@ or @union@) to be embedded (nested) within another one, \eg a tagged union.
529\begin{cfa}
530struct S {
531        unsigned int tag;
532        union { $\C{// anonymous nested aggregate}$
533                int x;  double y;  char z;
534        };
535} s;
536\end{cfa}
537The @union@ field-names are hoisted into the @struct@, so there is direct access, \eg @s.x@;
538hence, field names must be unique.
539For a nested anonymous @struct@, both field names and values are hoisted.
540\begin{cquote}
541\begin{tabular}{@{}l@{\hspace{35pt}}l@{}}
542original & rewritten \\
543\begin{cfa}
544struct S {
545        struct { int i, j; };
546        struct { int k, l; };
547};
548\end{cfa}
549&
550\begin{cfa}
551struct S {
552        int i, j;
553        int k, l;
554};
555\end{cfa}
556\end{tabular}
557\end{cquote}
558
559As an aside, C nested \emph{named} aggregates behave in a (mysterious) way because the nesting is allowed but there is no ability to use qualification to access an inner type, like the \CC type operator `@::@'.
560\emph{In fact, all named nested aggregates are hoisted to global scope, regardless of the nesting depth.}
561\begin{cquote}
562\begin{tabular}{@{}l@{\hspace{35pt}}l@{}}
563original & rewritten \\
564\begin{cfa}
565struct S {
566        struct T {
567                int i, j;
568        };
569        struct U {
570                int k, l;
571        };
572};
573\end{cfa}
574&
575\begin{cfa}
576struct T {
577        int i, j;
578};
579struct U {
580        int k, l;
581};
582struct S {
583};
584\end{cfa}
585\end{tabular}
586\end{cquote}
587Hence, the possible accesses are:
588\begin{cfa}
589struct S s; // s cannot access any fields
590struct T t;  t.i;  t.j;
591struct U u;  u.k;  u.l;
592\end{cfa}
593and the hoisted type names can clash with global type names.
594For good reasons, \CC chose to change this semantics:
595\begin{cquote}
596\begin{description}[leftmargin=*,topsep=0pt,itemsep=0pt,parsep=0pt]
597\item[Change:] A struct is a scope in C++, not in C.
598\item[Rationale:] Class scope is crucial to C++, and a struct is a class.
599\item[Effect on original feature:] Change to semantics of well-defined feature.
600\item[Difficulty of converting:] Semantic transformation.
601\item[How widely used:] C programs use @struct@ extremely frequently, but the change is only noticeable when @struct@, enumeration, or enumerator names are referred to outside the @struct@.
602The latter is probably rare.
603\end{description}
604\hfill ISO/IEC 14882:1998 (\CC Programming Language Standard)~\cite[C.1.2.3.3]{ANSI98:C++}
605\end{cquote}
606However, there is no syntax to access from a variable through a type to a field.
607\begin{cfa}
608struct S s;  @s::T@.i;  @s::U@.k;
609\end{cfa}
610\CFA chose to adopt the \CC non-compatible change for nested types, since \CC's change has already forced certain coding changes in C libraries that must be parsed by \CC.
611\CFA also added the ability to access from a variable through a type to a field.
612\begin{cfa}
613struct S s;  @s.T@.i;  @s.U@.k;
614\end{cfa}
615
616% https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Unnamed-Fields.html
617
618A polymorphic extension to nested aggregates appears in the Plan-9 C dialect, used in the Bell Labs' Plan-9 research operating system.
619The feature is called \newterm{unnamed substructures}~\cite[\S~3.3]{Thompson90new}, which continues to be supported by @gcc@ and @clang@ using the extension (@-fplan9-extensions@).
620The goal is to provided the same effect of the nested aggregate with the aggregate type defined elsewhere, which requires it be named.
621\begin{cfa}
622union U {  $\C{// unnested named}$
623        int x;  double y;  char z;
624} u;
625struct W {
626        int i;  double j;  char k;
627} w;
628struct S {
629        @struct W;@  $\C{// Plan-9 substructure}$
630        unsigned int tag;
631        @union U;@  $\C{// Plan-9 substructure}$
632} s;
633\end{cfa}
634Note, the position of the substructure is normally unimportant, unless there is some form of memory or @union@ overlay.
635Like an anonymous nested type, a named nested Plan-9 type has its field names hoisted into @struct S@, so there is direct access, \eg @s.x@ and @s.i@.
636Hence, the field names must be unique, unlike \CC nested types, but the type names are at a nested scope level, unlike type nesting in C.
637In addition, a pointer to a structure is automatically converted to a pointer to an anonymous field for assignments and function calls, providing containment inheritance with implicit subtyping, \ie @U@ $\subset$ @S@ and @W@ $\subset$ @S@, \eg:
638\begin{cfa}
639void f( union U * u );
640void g( struct W * );
641union U * up;   struct W * wp;   struct S * sp;
642up = &s; $\C{// assign pointer to U in S}$
643wp = &s; $\C{// assign pointer to W in S}$
644f( &s ); $\C{// pass pointer to U in S}$
645g( &s ); $\C{// pass pointer to W in S}$
646\end{cfa}
647Note, there is no value assignment, such as, @w = s@, to copy the @W@ field from @S@.
648
649Unfortunately, the Plan-9 designers did not lookahead to other useful features, specifically nested types.
650This nested type compiles in \CC and \CFA.
651\begin{cfa}
652struct R {
653        @struct T;@             $\C[2in]{// forward declaration, conflicts with Plan-9 syntax}$
654        struct S {              $\C{// nested types, mutually recursive reference}\CRT$
655                S * sp;   T * tp;  ...
656        };
657        struct T {
658                S * sp;   T * tp;  ...
659        };
660};
661\end{cfa}
662Note, the syntax for the forward declaration conflicts with the Plan-9 declaration syntax.
663
664\CFA extends the Plan-9 substructure by allowing polymorphism for values and pointers, where the extended substructure is denoted using @inline@.
665\begin{cfa}
666struct S {
667        @inline@ struct W;  $\C{// extended Plan-9 substructure}$
668        unsigned int tag;
669        @inline@ U;  $\C{// extended Plan-9 substructure}$
670} s;
671\end{cfa}
672Note, the declaration of @U@ is not prefixed with @union@.
673Like \CC, \CFA allows optional prefixing of type names with their kind, \eg @struct@, @union@, and @enum@, unless there is ambiguity with variable names in the same scope.
674In addition, a semi-non-compatible change is made so that Plan-9 syntax means a forward declaration in a nested type.
675Since the Plan-9 extension is not part of C and rarely used, this change has minimal impact.
676Hence, all Plan-9 semantics are denoted by the @inline@ qualifier, which good ``eye-candy'' when reading a structure definition to spot Plan-9 definitions.
677Finally, the following code shows the value and pointer polymorphism.
678\begin{cfa}
679void f( U, U * ); $\C{// value, pointer}$
680void g( W, W * ); $\C{// value, pointer}$
681U u, * up;   S s, * sp;   W w, * wp;
682u = s;   up = sp; $\C{// value, pointer}$
683w = s;   wp = sp; $\C{// value, pointer}$
684f( s, &s ); $\C{// value, pointer}$
685g( s, &s ); $\C{// value, pointer}$
686\end{cfa}
687
688In general, non-standard C features (@gcc@) do not need any special treatment, as they are directly passed through to the C compiler.
689However, the Plan-9 semantics allow implicit conversions from the outer type to the inner type, which means the \CFA type resolver must take this information into account.
690Therefore, the \CFA resolver must implement the Plan-9 features and insert necessary type conversions into the translated code output.
691In the current version of \CFA, this is the only kind of implicit type conversion other than the standard C conversions.
692
693Plan-9 polymorphism can result in duplicate field names.
694For example, the \newterm{diamond pattern}~\cite[\S~6.1]{Stroustrup89}\cite[\S~4]{Cargill91} can result in nested fields being embedded twice.
695\begin{cfa}
696struct A { int x; };
697struct B { inline A; };
698struct C { inline A; };
699struct D {
700        inline B;  // B.x
701        inline C;  // C.x
702} d;
703\end{cfa}
704Because the @inline@ structures are flattened, the expression @d.x@ is ambiguous, as it can refer to the embedded field either from @B@ or @C@.
705@gcc@ generates a syntax error about the duplicate member @x@.
706The equivalent \CC definition compiles:
707\begin{c++}
708struct A { int x; };
709struct B : public A {};
710struct C : public A {};
711struct D : @public B, C@ {  // multiple inheritance
712} d;
713\end{c++}
714and again the expression @d.x@ is ambiguous.
715While \CC has no direct syntax to disambiguate @x@, \ie @d.B.x@ or @d.C.x@, it is possible with casts, @((B)d).x@ or @((C)d).x@.
716Like \CC, \CFA compiles the Plan-9 version and provides direct syntax and casts to disambiguate @x@.
717While ambiguous definitions are allowed, duplicate field names is poor practice and should be avoided if possible.
718However, when a programmer does not control all code, this problem can occur and a naming workaround should exist.
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