[9d3a4cc] | 1 | \chapter{C Enumeration in \texorpdfstring{\CFA}{Cforall}} |
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[dd78dbc] | 2 | |
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[c4aca65] | 3 | \CFA supports legacy C enumeration using the same syntax for backward compatibility. |
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[a57ad8a] | 4 | A C-style enumeration in \CFA is called a \newterm{C Enum}. |
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| 5 | The semantics of the C Enum is mostly consistent with C with some restrictions. |
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[94643698] | 6 | The following sections detail all of my new contributions to enumerations in C. |
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[a57ad8a] | 7 | |
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[dd78dbc] | 8 | |
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[0c51c8b4] | 9 | \section{Visibility} |
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| 10 | \label{s:CVisibility} |
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[dd78dbc] | 11 | |
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| 12 | In C, unscoped enumerators present a \newterm{naming problem} when multiple enumeration types appear in the same scope with duplicate enumerator names. |
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[a57ad8a] | 13 | \begin{cfa} |
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| 14 | enum E1 { First, Second, Third, Fourth }; |
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| 15 | enum E2 { @Fourth@, @Third@, @Second@, @First@ }; $\C{// same enumerator names}$ |
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| 16 | \end{cfa} |
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[c1c0efdb] | 17 | There is no mechanism in C to resolve these naming conflicts other than renaming one of the duplicates, which may be impossible if the conflict comes from system include-files. |
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[dd78dbc] | 18 | |
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| 19 | The \CFA type-system allows extensive overloading, including enumerators. |
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[a57ad8a] | 20 | Hence, most ambiguities among C enumerators are implicitly resolved by the \CFA type system, possibly without any programmer knowledge of the conflict. |
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[c1c0efdb] | 21 | In addition, C Enum qualification is added, exactly like aggregate field-qualification, to disambiguate. |
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[a57ad8a] | 22 | \VRef[Figure]{f:EnumeratorVisibility} shows how resolution, qualification, and casting are used to disambiguate situations for enumerations @E1@ and @E2@. |
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[dd78dbc] | 23 | |
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| 24 | \begin{figure} |
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| 25 | \begin{cfa} |
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[c141c09] | 26 | E1 f() { return Third; } $\C{// overload functions with different return types}$ |
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[dd78dbc] | 27 | E2 f() { return Fourth; } |
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| 28 | void g( E1 e ); |
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| 29 | void h( E2 e ); |
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| 30 | void foo() { $\C{// different resolutions and dealing with ambiguities}$ |
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| 31 | E1 e1 = First; E2 e2 = First; $\C{// initialization}$ |
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| 32 | e1 = Second; e2 = Second; $\C{// assignment}$ |
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| 33 | e1 = f(); e2 = f(); $\C{// function return}$ |
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| 34 | g( First ); h( First ); $\C{// function argument}$ |
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| 35 | int i = @E1.@First + @E2.@First; $\C{// disambiguate with qualification}$ |
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| 36 | int j = @(E1)@First + @(E2)@First; $\C{// disambiguate with cast}$ |
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| 37 | } |
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| 38 | \end{cfa} |
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| 39 | \caption{Enumerator Visibility and Disambiguating} |
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| 40 | \label{f:EnumeratorVisibility} |
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| 41 | \end{figure} |
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| 42 | |
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| 43 | |
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[0c51c8b4] | 44 | \section{Scoping} |
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[dd78dbc] | 45 | |
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[a57ad8a] | 46 | A C Enum can be scoped, using @'!'@, so the enumerator constants are not projected into the enclosing scope. |
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[dd78dbc] | 47 | \begin{cfa} |
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| 48 | enum Week @!@ { Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu = 10, Fri, Sat, Sun }; |
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| 49 | enum RGB @!@ { Red, Green, Blue }; |
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| 50 | \end{cfa} |
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| 51 | Now the enumerators \emph{must} be qualified with the associated enumeration type. |
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| 52 | \begin{cfa} |
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| 53 | Week week = @Week.@Mon; |
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| 54 | week = @Week.@Sat; |
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| 55 | RGB rgb = @RGB.@Red; |
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| 56 | rgb = @RGB.@Blue; |
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| 57 | \end{cfa} |
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[94643698] | 58 | % with feature unimplemented |
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[a57ad8a] | 59 | It is possible to toggle back to unscoped using the \CFA @with@ auto-qualification clause/statement (see also \CC \lstinline[language=c++]{using enum} in Section~\ref{s:C++RelatedWork}). |
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[dd78dbc] | 60 | \begin{cfa} |
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| 61 | with ( @Week@, @RGB@ ) { $\C{// type names}$ |
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| 62 | week = @Sun@; $\C{// no qualification}$ |
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| 63 | rgb = @Green@; |
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| 64 | } |
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| 65 | \end{cfa} |
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[0c51c8b4] | 66 | As in Section~\ref{s:CVisibility}, opening multiple scoped enumerations in a @with@ can result in duplicate enumeration names, but \CFA implicit type resolution and explicit qualification/casting handle this localized scenario. |
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[dd78dbc] | 67 | |
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[a57ad8a] | 68 | |
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[dd78dbc] | 69 | \section{Type Safety} |
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[c1c0efdb] | 70 | \label{s:TypeSafety} |
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[dd78dbc] | 71 | |
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[c141c09] | 72 | As in Section~\ref{s:Usage}, C's implicit bidirectional conversion between enumeration and integral type raises a safety concern. |
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[a57ad8a] | 73 | In \CFA, the conversion is changed to unidirectional: an enumeration can be implicitly converted into an integral type, with an associated @safe@ conversion cost. |
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[c4aca65] | 74 | However, an integral type cannot be implicitly converted into a C enumeration because the conversion cost is set to @infinity@. |
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[dd78dbc] | 75 | \begin{cfa} |
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[a57ad8a] | 76 | enum Bird { Penguin, Robin, Eagle }; |
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[dd78dbc] | 77 | enum Fish { Shark, Salmon, Whale }; |
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| 78 | |
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[94643698] | 79 | int i = Robin; $\C{// allow, implicitly converts to 1}$ |
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| 80 | enum Bird @bird = 1;@ $\C{// disallow }$ |
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| 81 | enum Bird @bird = Shark;@ $\C{// disallow }$ |
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[a57ad8a] | 82 | \end{cfa} |
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| 83 | It is now up to the programmer to insert an explicit cast to force the assignment. |
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| 84 | \begin{cfa} |
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| 85 | enum Bird bird = @(Bird)@1; |
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[94643698] | 86 | enum Bird bird = @(Bird)@Shark |
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[a57ad8a] | 87 | \end{cfa} |
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| 88 | |
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[508cff0] | 89 | Note, \CC has the same safe restriction and provides the same workaround cast: |
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| 90 | \begin{cquote} |
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| 91 | \begin{description}[leftmargin=*,topsep=0pt,itemsep=0pt,parsep=0pt] |
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[a57ad8a] | 92 | \item[Change:] \CC objects of enumeration type can only be assigned values of the same enumeration type. |
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| 93 | In C, objects of enumeration type can be assigned values of any integral type. |
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| 94 | Example: |
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| 95 | \begin{cfa} |
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| 96 | enum color { red, blue, green }; |
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| 97 | color c = 1; $\C{// valid C, invalid \CC}$ |
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[c141c09] | 98 | \end{cfa} |
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[a57ad8a] | 99 | \item[Rationale:] The type-safe nature of \CC. |
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| 100 | \item[Effect on original feature:] Deletion of semantically well-defined feature. |
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| 101 | \item[Difficulty of converting:] Syntactic transformation. (The type error produced by the assignment can be |
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| 102 | automatically corrected by applying an explicit cast.) |
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| 103 | \item[How widely used:] Common. |
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| 104 | \end{description} |
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[508cff0] | 105 | \hfill ISO/IEC 14882:1998 (\CC Programming Language Standard)~\cite[C.1.5.7.2.5]{ANSI98:C++} |
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| 106 | \end{cquote} |
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