2001-09-12 Gary Houston <ghouston@arglist.com>
[bpt/guile.git] / NEWS
CommitLineData
f7b47737 1Guile NEWS --- history of user-visible changes. -*- text -*-
6fe692e9 2Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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3See the end for copying conditions.
4
e1b6c710 5Please send Guile bug reports to bug-guile@gnu.org.
5c54da76 6\f
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7Changes since the stable branch:
8
8c84b81e 9** Variables have no longer a special behavior for `equal?'.
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10
11Previously, comparing two variables with `equal?' would recursivly
12compare their values. This is no longer done. Variables are now only
13`equal?' if they are `eq?'.
14
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15Changes since Guile 1.4:
16
17* Changes to the distribution
18
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19** A top-level TODO file is included.
20
311b6a3c 21** Guile now uses a versioning scheme similar to that of the Linux kernel.
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22
23Guile now always uses three numbers to represent the version,
24i.e. "1.6.5". The first number, 1, is the major version number, the
25second number, 6, is the minor version number, and the third number,
265, is the micro version number. Changes in major version number
27indicate major changes in Guile.
28
29Minor version numbers that are even denote stable releases, and odd
30minor version numbers denote development versions (which may be
31unstable). The micro version number indicates a minor sub-revision of
32a given MAJOR.MINOR release.
33
34In keeping with the new scheme, (minor-version) and scm_minor_version
35no longer return everything but the major version number. They now
36just return the minor version number. Two new functions
37(micro-version) and scm_micro_version have been added to report the
38micro version number.
39
40In addition, ./GUILE-VERSION now defines GUILE_MICRO_VERSION.
41
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42** Guile now actively warns about deprecated features.
43
44The new configure option `--enable-deprecated=LEVEL' and the
45environment variable GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATED control this mechanism.
46See INSTALL and README for more information.
47
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48** New functions: setitimer and getitimer.
49
50These implement a fairly direct interface to the libc functions of the
51same name.
52
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53** The #. reader extension is now disabled by default.
54
55For safety reasons, #. evaluation is disabled by default. To
56re-enable it, set the fluid read-eval? to #t. For example:
57
67b7dd9e 58 (fluid-set! read-eval? #t)
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59
60but make sure you realize the potential security risks involved. With
61read-eval? enabled, reading a data file from an untrusted source can
62be dangerous.
63
f2a75d81 64** New SRFI modules have been added:
4df36934 65
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66SRFI-0 `cond-expand' is now supported in Guile, without requiring
67using a module.
68
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69(srfi srfi-1) is a library containing many useful pair- and list-processing
70 procedures.
71
7adc2c58 72(srfi srfi-2) exports and-let*.
4df36934 73
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74(srfi srfi-4) implements homogeneous numeric vector datatypes.
75
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76(srfi srfi-6) is a dummy module for now, since guile already provides
77 all of the srfi-6 procedures by default: open-input-string,
78 open-output-string, get-output-string.
4df36934 79
7adc2c58 80(srfi srfi-8) exports receive.
4df36934 81
7adc2c58 82(srfi srfi-9) exports define-record-type.
4df36934 83
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84(srfi srfi-10) exports define-reader-ctor and implements the reader
85 extension #,().
86
7adc2c58 87(srfi srfi-11) exports let-values and let*-values.
4df36934 88
7adc2c58 89(srfi srfi-13) implements the SRFI String Library.
53e29a1e 90
7adc2c58 91(srfi srfi-14) implements the SRFI Character-Set Library.
53e29a1e 92
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93(srfi srfi-17) implements setter and getter-with-setter and redefines
94 some accessor procedures as procedures with getters. (such as car,
95 cdr, vector-ref etc.)
96
97(srfi srfi-19) implements the SRFI Time/Date Library.
2b60bc95 98
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99** New scripts / "executable modules"
100
101Subdirectory "scripts" contains Scheme modules that are packaged to
102also be executable as scripts. At this time, these scripts are available:
103
104 display-commentary
105 doc-snarf
106 generate-autoload
107 punify
58e5b910 108 read-scheme-source
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109 use2dot
110
111See README there for more info.
112
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113These scripts can be invoked from the shell with the new program
114"guile-tools", which keeps track of installation directory for you.
115For example:
116
117 $ guile-tools display-commentary srfi/*.scm
118
119guile-tools is copied to the standard $bindir on "make install".
120
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121** New module (ice-9 stack-catch):
122
123stack-catch is like catch, but saves the current state of the stack in
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124the fluid the-last-stack. This fluid can be useful when using the
125debugger and when re-throwing an error.
0109c4bf 126
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127** The module (ice-9 and-let*) has been renamed to (ice-9 and-let-star)
128
129This has been done to prevent problems on lesser operating systems
130that can't tolerate `*'s in file names. The exported macro continues
131to be named `and-let*', of course.
132
4f60cc33 133On systems that support it, there is also a compatibility module named
fbf0c8c7 134(ice-9 and-let*). It will go away in the next release.
6c0201ad 135
9d774814 136** New modules (oop goops) etc.:
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137
138 (oop goops)
139 (oop goops describe)
140 (oop goops save)
141 (oop goops active-slot)
142 (oop goops composite-slot)
143
9d774814 144The Guile Object Oriented Programming System (GOOPS) has been
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145integrated into Guile. For further information, consult the GOOPS
146manual and tutorial in the `doc' directory.
14f1d9fe 147
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148** New module (ice-9 rdelim).
149
150This exports the following procedures which were previously defined
1c8cbd62 151in the default environment:
9d774814 152
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153read-line read-line! read-delimited read-delimited! %read-delimited!
154%read-line write-line
9d774814 155
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156For backwards compatibility the definitions are still imported into the
157default environment in this version of Guile. However you should add:
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158
159(use-modules (ice-9 rdelim))
160
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161to any program which uses the definitions, since this may change in
162future.
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163
164Alternatively, if guile-scsh is installed, the (scsh rdelim) module
165can be used for similar functionality.
166
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167** New module (ice-9 rw)
168
169This is a subset of the (scsh rw) module from guile-scsh. Currently
373f4948 170it defines two procedures:
7e267da1 171
311b6a3c 172*** New function: read-string!/partial str [port_or_fdes [start [end]]]
7e267da1 173
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174 Read characters from a port or file descriptor into a string STR.
175 A port must have an underlying file descriptor -- a so-called
176 fport. This procedure is scsh-compatible and can efficiently read
311b6a3c 177 large strings.
7e267da1 178
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179*** New function: write-string/partial str [port_or_fdes [start [end]]]
180
181 Write characters from a string STR to a port or file descriptor.
182 A port must have an underlying file descriptor -- a so-called
183 fport. This procedure is mostly compatible and can efficiently
184 write large strings.
185
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186** New module (ice-9 match)
187
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188This module includes Andrew K. Wright's pattern matcher. See
189ice-9/match.scm for brief description or
e5005373 190
311b6a3c 191 http://www.star-lab.com/wright/code.html
e5005373 192
311b6a3c 193for complete documentation.
e5005373 194
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195** New module (ice-9 buffered-input)
196
197This module provides procedures to construct an input port from an
198underlying source of input that reads and returns its input in chunks.
199The underlying input source is a Scheme procedure, specified by the
200caller, which the port invokes whenever it needs more input.
201
202This is useful when building an input port whose back end is Readline
203or a UI element such as the GtkEntry widget.
204
205** Documentation
206
207The reference and tutorial documentation that was previously
208distributed separately, as `guile-doc', is now included in the core
209Guile distribution. The documentation consists of the following
210manuals.
211
212- The Guile Tutorial (guile-tut.texi) contains a tutorial introduction
213 to using Guile.
214
215- The Guile Reference Manual (guile.texi) contains (or is intended to
216 contain) reference documentation on all aspects of Guile.
217
218- The GOOPS Manual (goops.texi) contains both tutorial-style and
219 reference documentation for using GOOPS, Guile's Object Oriented
220 Programming System.
221
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222- The Revised^5 Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme
223 (r5rs.texi).
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224
225See the README file in the `doc' directory for more details.
226
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227** There are a couple of examples in the examples/ directory now.
228
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229* Changes to the stand-alone interpreter
230
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231** New command line option `--use-srfi'
232
233Using this option, SRFI modules can be loaded on startup and be
234available right from the beginning. This makes programming portable
235Scheme programs easier.
236
237The option `--use-srfi' expects a comma-separated list of numbers,
238each representing a SRFI number to be loaded into the interpreter
239before starting evaluating a script file or the REPL. Additionally,
240the feature identifier for the loaded SRFIs is recognized by
241`cond-expand' when using this option.
242
243Example:
244$ guile --use-srfi=8,13
245guile> (receive (x z) (values 1 2) (+ 1 2))
2463
58e5b910 247guile> (string-pad "bla" 20)
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248" bla"
249
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250** Guile now always starts up in the `(guile-user)' module.
251
6e9382f1 252Previously, scripts executed via the `-s' option would run in the
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253`(guile)' module and the repl would run in the `(guile-user)' module.
254Now every user action takes place in the `(guile-user)' module by
255default.
e7e58018 256
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257* Changes to Scheme functions and syntax
258
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259** Character classifiers work for non-ASCII characters.
260
261The predicates `char-alphabetic?', `char-numeric?',
262`char-whitespace?', `char-lower?', `char-upper?' and `char-is-both?'
263no longer check whether their arguments are ASCII characters.
264Previously, a character would only be considered alphabetic when it
265was also ASCII, for example.
266
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267** Previously deprecated Scheme functions have been removed:
268
269 tag - no replacement.
270 fseek - replaced by seek.
271 list* - replaced by cons*.
272
273** It's now possible to create modules with controlled environments
274
275Example:
276
277(use-modules (ice-9 safe))
278(define m (make-safe-module))
279;;; m will now be a module containing only a safe subset of R5RS
280(eval '(+ 1 2) m) --> 3
281(eval 'load m) --> ERROR: Unbound variable: load
282
283** Evaluation of "()", the empty list, is now an error.
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284
285Previously, the expression "()" evaluated to the empty list. This has
286been changed to signal a "missing expression" error. The correct way
287to write the empty list as a literal constant is to use quote: "'()".
288
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289** New concept of `Guile Extensions'.
290
291A Guile Extension is just a ordinary shared library that can be linked
292at run-time. We found it advantageous to give this simple concept a
293dedicated name to distinguish the issues related to shared libraries
294from the issues related to the module system.
295
296*** New function: load-extension
297
298Executing (load-extension lib init) is mostly equivalent to
299
300 (dynamic-call init (dynamic-link lib))
301
302except when scm_register_extension has been called previously.
303Whenever appropriate, you should use `load-extension' instead of
304dynamic-link and dynamic-call.
305
306*** New C function: scm_c_register_extension
307
308This function registers a initialization function for use by
309`load-extension'. Use it when you don't want specific extensions to
310be loaded as shared libraries (for example on platforms that don't
311support dynamic linking).
312
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313** Auto-loading of compiled-code modules is deprecated.
314
315Guile used to be able to automatically find and link a shared
c10ecc4c 316library to satisfy requests for a module. For example, the module
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317`(foo bar)' could be implemented by placing a shared library named
318"foo/libbar.so" (or with a different extension) in a directory on the
319load path of Guile.
320
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321This has been found to be too tricky, and is no longer supported. The
322shared libraries are now called "extensions". You should now write a
323small Scheme file that calls `load-extension' to load the shared
324library and initialize it explicitely.
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325
326The shared libraries themselves should be installed in the usual
327places for shared libraries, with names like "libguile-foo-bar".
328
329For example, place this into a file "foo/bar.scm"
330
331 (define-module (foo bar))
332
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333 (load-extension "libguile-foo-bar" "foobar_init")
334
335** Backward incompatible change: eval EXP ENVIRONMENT-SPECIFIER
336
337`eval' is now R5RS, that is it takes two arguments.
338The second argument is an environment specifier, i.e. either
339
340 (scheme-report-environment 5)
341 (null-environment 5)
342 (interaction-environment)
343
344or
8c2c9967 345
311b6a3c 346 any module.
8c2c9967 347
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348** The module system has been made more disciplined.
349
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350The function `eval' will save and restore the current module around
351the evaluation of the specified expression. While this expression is
352evaluated, `(current-module)' will now return the right module, which
353is the module specified as the second argument to `eval'.
6f76852b 354
311b6a3c 355A consequence of this change is that `eval' is not particularly
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356useful when you want allow the evaluated code to change what module is
357designated as the current module and have this change persist from one
358call to `eval' to the next. The read-eval-print-loop is an example
359where `eval' is now inadequate. To compensate, there is a new
360function `primitive-eval' that does not take a module specifier and
361that does not save/restore the current module. You should use this
362function together with `set-current-module', `current-module', etc
363when you want to have more control over the state that is carried from
364one eval to the next.
365
366Additionally, it has been made sure that forms that are evaluated at
367the top level are always evaluated with respect to the current module.
368Previously, subforms of top-level forms such as `begin', `case',
369etc. did not respect changes to the current module although these
370subforms are at the top-level as well.
371
311b6a3c 372To prevent strange behavior, the forms `define-module',
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373`use-modules', `use-syntax', and `export' have been restricted to only
374work on the top level. The forms `define-public' and
375`defmacro-public' only export the new binding on the top level. They
376behave just like `define' and `defmacro', respectively, when they are
377used in a lexical environment.
378
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379Also, `export' will no longer silently re-export bindings imported
380from a used module. It will emit a `deprecation' warning and will
381cease to perform any re-export in the next version. If you actually
382want to re-export bindings, use the new `re-export' in place of
383`export'. The new `re-export' will not make copies of variables when
384rexporting them, as `export' did wrongly.
385
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386** Module system now allows selection and renaming of imported bindings
387
388Previously, when using `use-modules' or the `#:use-module' clause in
389the `define-module' form, all the bindings (association of symbols to
390values) for imported modules were added to the "current module" on an
391as-is basis. This has been changed to allow finer control through two
392new facilities: selection and renaming.
393
394You can now select which of the imported module's bindings are to be
395visible in the current module by using the `:select' clause. This
396clause also can be used to rename individual bindings. For example:
397
398 ;; import all bindings no questions asked
399 (use-modules (ice-9 common-list))
400
401 ;; import four bindings, renaming two of them;
402 ;; the current module sees: every some zonk-y zonk-n
403 (use-modules ((ice-9 common-list)
404 :select (every some
405 (remove-if . zonk-y)
406 (remove-if-not . zonk-n))))
407
408You can also programmatically rename all selected bindings using the
409`:renamer' clause, which specifies a proc that takes a symbol and
410returns another symbol. Because it is common practice to use a prefix,
411we now provide the convenience procedure `symbol-prefix-proc'. For
412example:
413
414 ;; import four bindings, renaming two of them specifically,
415 ;; and all four w/ prefix "CL:";
416 ;; the current module sees: CL:every CL:some CL:zonk-y CL:zonk-n
417 (use-modules ((ice-9 common-list)
418 :select (every some
419 (remove-if . zonk-y)
420 (remove-if-not . zonk-n))
421 :renamer (symbol-prefix-proc 'CL:)))
422
423 ;; import four bindings, renaming two of them specifically,
424 ;; and all four by upcasing.
425 ;; the current module sees: EVERY SOME ZONK-Y ZONK-N
426 (define (upcase-symbol sym)
427 (string->symbol (string-upcase (symbol->string sym))))
428
429 (use-modules ((ice-9 common-list)
430 :select (every some
431 (remove-if . zonk-y)
432 (remove-if-not . zonk-n))
433 :renamer upcase-symbol))
434
435Note that programmatic renaming is done *after* individual renaming.
436Also, the above examples show `use-modules', but the same facilities are
437available for the `#:use-module' clause of `define-module'.
438
439See manual for more info.
440
b7d69200 441** The semantics of guardians have changed.
56495472 442
b7d69200 443The changes are for the most part compatible. An important criterion
6c0201ad 444was to keep the typical usage of guardians as simple as before, but to
c0a5d888 445make the semantics safer and (as a result) more useful.
56495472 446
c0a5d888 447*** All objects returned from guardians are now properly alive.
56495472 448
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449It is now guaranteed that any object referenced by an object returned
450from a guardian is alive. It's now impossible for a guardian to
451return a "contained" object before its "containing" object.
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452
453One incompatible (but probably not very important) change resulting
454from this is that it is no longer possible to guard objects that
455indirectly reference themselves (i.e. are parts of cycles). If you do
456so accidentally, you'll get a warning.
457
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458*** There are now two types of guardians: greedy and sharing.
459
460If you call (make-guardian #t) or just (make-guardian), you'll get a
461greedy guardian, and for (make-guardian #f) a sharing guardian.
462
463Greedy guardians are the default because they are more "defensive".
464You can only greedily guard an object once. If you guard an object
465more than once, once in a greedy guardian and the rest of times in
466sharing guardians, then it is guaranteed that the object won't be
467returned from sharing guardians as long as it is greedily guarded
468and/or alive.
469
470Guardians returned by calls to `make-guardian' can now take one more
471optional parameter, which says whether to throw an error in case an
472attempt is made to greedily guard an object that is already greedily
473guarded. The default is true, i.e. throw an error. If the parameter
474is false, the guardian invocation returns #t if guarding was
475successful and #f if it wasn't.
476
477Also, since greedy guarding is, in effect, a side-effecting operation
478on objects, a new function is introduced: `destroy-guardian!'.
479Invoking this function on a guardian renders it unoperative and, if
480the guardian is greedy, clears the "greedily guarded" property of the
481objects that were guarded by it, thus undoing the side effect.
482
483Note that all this hair is hardly very important, since guardian
484objects are usually permanent.
485
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486** Continuations created by call-with-current-continuation now accept
487any number of arguments, as required by R5RS.
818febc0 488
c10ecc4c 489** New function `issue-deprecation-warning'
56426fdb 490
311b6a3c 491This function is used to display the deprecation messages that are
c10ecc4c 492controlled by GUILE_WARN_DEPRECATION as explained in the README.
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493
494 (define (id x)
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495 (issue-deprecation-warning "`id' is deprecated. Use `identity' instead.")
496 (identity x))
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497
498 guile> (id 1)
499 ;; `id' is deprecated. Use `identity' instead.
500 1
501 guile> (id 1)
502 1
503
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504** New syntax `begin-deprecated'
505
506When deprecated features are included (as determined by the configure
507option --enable-deprecated), `begin-deprecated' is identical to
508`begin'. When deprecated features are excluded, it always evaluates
509to `#f', ignoring the body forms.
510
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511** New function `make-object-property'
512
513This function returns a new `procedure with setter' P that can be used
514to attach a property to objects. When calling P as
515
516 (set! (P obj) val)
517
518where `obj' is any kind of object, it attaches `val' to `obj' in such
519a way that it can be retrieved by calling P as
520
521 (P obj)
522
523This function will replace procedure properties, symbol properties and
524source properties eventually.
525
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526** Module (ice-9 optargs) now uses keywords instead of `#&'.
527
528Instead of #&optional, #&key, etc you should now use #:optional,
529#:key, etc. Since #:optional is a keyword, you can write it as just
530:optional when (read-set! keywords 'prefix) is active.
531
532The old reader syntax `#&' is still supported, but deprecated. It
533will be removed in the next release.
534
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535** New define-module option: pure
536
537Tells the module system not to include any bindings from the root
538module.
539
540Example:
541
542(define-module (totally-empty-module)
543 :pure)
544
545** New define-module option: export NAME1 ...
546
547Export names NAME1 ...
548
549This option is required if you want to be able to export bindings from
550a module which doesn't import one of `define-public' or `export'.
551
552Example:
553
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554 (define-module (foo)
555 :pure
556 :use-module (ice-9 r5rs)
557 :export (bar))
69b5f65a 558
311b6a3c 559 ;;; Note that we're pure R5RS below this point!
69b5f65a 560
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561 (define (bar)
562 ...)
daa6ba18 563
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564** New function: object->string OBJ
565
566Return a Scheme string obtained by printing a given object.
567
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568** New function: port? X
569
570Returns a boolean indicating whether X is a port. Equivalent to
571`(or (input-port? X) (output-port? X))'.
572
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573** New function: file-port?
574
575Determines whether a given object is a port that is related to a file.
576
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577** New function: port-for-each proc
578
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579Apply PROC to each port in the Guile port table in turn. The return
580value is unspecified. More specifically, PROC is applied exactly once
581to every port that exists in the system at the time PORT-FOR-EACH is
582invoked. Changes to the port table while PORT-FOR-EACH is running
583have no effect as far as PORT-FOR-EACH is concerned.
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584
585** New function: dup2 oldfd newfd
586
587A simple wrapper for the `dup2' system call. Copies the file
588descriptor OLDFD to descriptor number NEWFD, replacing the
589previous meaning of NEWFD. Both OLDFD and NEWFD must be integers.
590Unlike for dup->fdes or primitive-move->fdes, no attempt is made
264e9cbc 591to move away ports which are using NEWFD. The return value is
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592unspecified.
593
594** New function: close-fdes fd
595
596A simple wrapper for the `close' system call. Close file
597descriptor FD, which must be an integer. Unlike close (*note
598close: Ports and File Descriptors.), the file descriptor will be
599closed even if a port is using it. The return value is
600unspecified.
601
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602** New function: crypt password salt
603
604Encrypts `password' using the standard unix password encryption
605algorithm.
606
607** New function: chroot path
608
609Change the root directory of the running process to `path'.
610
611** New functions: getlogin, cuserid
612
613Return the login name or the user name of the current effective user
614id, respectively.
615
616** New functions: getpriority which who, setpriority which who prio
617
618Get or set the priority of the running process.
619
620** New function: getpass prompt
621
622Read a password from the terminal, first displaying `prompt' and
623disabling echoing.
624
625** New function: flock file operation
626
627Set/remove an advisory shared or exclusive lock on `file'.
628
629** New functions: sethostname name, gethostname
630
631Set or get the hostname of the machine the current process is running
632on.
633
6d163216 634** New function: mkstemp! tmpl
4f60cc33 635
6d163216
GH
636mkstemp creates a new unique file in the file system and returns a
637new buffered port open for reading and writing to the file. TMPL
638is a string specifying where the file should be created: it must
639end with `XXXXXX' and will be changed in place to return the name
640of the temporary file.
641
62e63ba9
MG
642** New function: open-input-string string
643
644Return an input string port which delivers the characters from
4f60cc33 645`string'. This procedure, together with `open-output-string' and
62e63ba9
MG
646`get-output-string' implements SRFI-6.
647
648** New function: open-output-string
649
650Return an output string port which collects all data written to it.
651The data can then be retrieved by `get-output-string'.
652
653** New function: get-output-string
654
655Return the contents of an output string port.
656
56426fdb
KN
657** New function: identity
658
659Return the argument.
660
5bef627d
GH
661** socket, connect, accept etc., now have support for IPv6. IPv6 addresses
662 are represented in Scheme as integers with normal host byte ordering.
663
664** New function: inet-pton family address
665
311b6a3c
MV
666Convert a printable string network address into an integer. Note that
667unlike the C version of this function, the result is an integer with
668normal host byte ordering. FAMILY can be `AF_INET' or `AF_INET6'.
669e.g.,
670
671 (inet-pton AF_INET "127.0.0.1") => 2130706433
672 (inet-pton AF_INET6 "::1") => 1
5bef627d
GH
673
674** New function: inet-ntop family address
675
311b6a3c
MV
676Convert an integer network address into a printable string. Note that
677unlike the C version of this function, the input is an integer with
678normal host byte ordering. FAMILY can be `AF_INET' or `AF_INET6'.
679e.g.,
680
681 (inet-ntop AF_INET 2130706433) => "127.0.0.1"
682 (inet-ntop AF_INET6 (- (expt 2 128) 1)) =>
5bef627d
GH
683 ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff
684
56426fdb
KN
685** Deprecated: id
686
687Use `identity' instead.
688
5cd06d5e
DH
689** Deprecated: -1+
690
691Use `1-' instead.
692
693** Deprecated: return-it
694
311b6a3c 695Do without it.
5cd06d5e
DH
696
697** Deprecated: string-character-length
698
699Use `string-length' instead.
700
701** Deprecated: flags
702
703Use `logior' instead.
704
4f60cc33
NJ
705** Deprecated: close-all-ports-except.
706
707This was intended for closing ports in a child process after a fork,
708but it has the undesirable side effect of flushing buffers.
709port-for-each is more flexible.
34b56ec4
GH
710
711** The (ice-9 popen) module now attempts to set up file descriptors in
712the child process from the current Scheme ports, instead of using the
713current values of file descriptors 0, 1, and 2 in the parent process.
714
b52e071b
DH
715** Removed function: builtin-weak-bindings
716
717There is no such concept as a weak binding any more.
718
9d774814 719** Removed constants: bignum-radix, scm-line-incrementors
0f979f3f 720
7d435120
MD
721** define-method: New syntax mandatory.
722
723The new method syntax is now mandatory:
724
725(define-method (NAME ARG-SPEC ...) BODY ...)
726(define-method (NAME ARG-SPEC ... . REST-ARG) BODY ...)
727
728 ARG-SPEC ::= ARG-NAME | (ARG-NAME TYPE)
729 REST-ARG ::= ARG-NAME
730
731If you have old code using the old syntax, import
732(oop goops old-define-method) before (oop goops) as in:
733
734 (use-modules (oop goops old-define-method) (oop goops))
735
f3f9dcbc
MV
736** Deprecated function: builtin-variable
737 Removed function: builtin-bindings
738
739There is no longer a distinction between builtin or other variables.
740Use module system operations for all variables.
741
311b6a3c
MV
742** Lazy-catch handlers are no longer allowed to return.
743
744That is, a call to `throw', `error', etc is now guaranteed to not
745return.
746
a583bf1e 747** Bugfixes for (ice-9 getopt-long)
8c84b81e 748
a583bf1e
TTN
749This module is now tested using test-suite/tests/getopt-long.test.
750The following bugs have been fixed:
751
752*** Parsing for options that are specified to have `optional' args now checks
753if the next element is an option instead of unconditionally taking it as the
8c84b81e
TTN
754option arg.
755
a583bf1e
TTN
756*** An error is now thrown for `--opt=val' when the option description
757does not specify `(value #t)' or `(value optional)'. This condition used to
758be accepted w/o error, contrary to the documentation.
759
760*** The error message for unrecognized options is now more informative.
761It used to be "not a record", an artifact of the implementation.
762
763*** The error message for `--opt' terminating the arg list (no value), when
764`(value #t)' is specified, is now more informative. It used to be "not enough
765args".
766
767*** "Clumped" single-char args now preserve trailing string, use it as arg.
768The expansion used to be like so:
769
770 ("-abc5d" "--xyz") => ("-a" "-b" "-c" "--xyz")
771
772Note that the "5d" is dropped. Now it is like so:
773
774 ("-abc5d" "--xyz") => ("-a" "-b" "-c" "5d" "--xyz")
775
776This enables single-char options to have adjoining arguments as long as their
777constituent characters are not potential single-char options.
8c84b81e 778
998bfc70
TTN
779** (ice-9 session) procedure `arity' now works with (ice-9 optargs) `lambda*'
780
781The `lambda*' and derivative forms in (ice-9 optargs) now set a procedure
782property `arglist', which can be retrieved by `arity'. The result is that
783`arity' can give more detailed information than before:
784
785Before:
786
787 guile> (use-modules (ice-9 optargs))
788 guile> (define* (foo #:optional a b c) a)
789 guile> (arity foo)
790 0 or more arguments in `lambda*:G0'.
791
792After:
793
794 guile> (arity foo)
795 3 optional arguments: `a', `b' and `c'.
796 guile> (define* (bar a b #:key c d #:allow-other-keys) a)
797 guile> (arity bar)
798 2 required arguments: `a' and `b', 2 keyword arguments: `c'
799 and `d', other keywords allowed.
800 guile> (define* (baz a b #:optional c #:rest r) a)
801 guile> (arity baz)
802 2 required arguments: `a' and `b', 1 optional argument: `c',
803 the rest in `r'.
804
311b6a3c
MV
805* Changes to the C interface
806
c81c130e
MV
807** Types have been renamed from scm_*_t to scm_t_*.
808
809This has been done for POSIX sake. It reserves identifiers ending
810with "_t". What a concept.
811
812The old names are still available with status `deprecated'.
813
814** scm_t_bits (former scm_bits_t) is now a unsigned type.
815
6e9382f1 816** Deprecated features have been removed.
e6c9e497
MV
817
818*** Macros removed
819
820 SCM_INPORTP, SCM_OUTPORTP SCM_ICHRP, SCM_ICHR, SCM_MAKICHR
821 SCM_SETJMPBUF SCM_NSTRINGP SCM_NRWSTRINGP SCM_NVECTORP SCM_DOUBLE_CELLP
822
823*** C Functions removed
824
825 scm_sysmissing scm_tag scm_tc16_flo scm_tc_flo
826 scm_fseek - replaced by scm_seek.
827 gc-thunk - replaced by after-gc-hook.
828 gh_int2scmb - replaced by gh_bool2scm.
829 scm_tc_dblr - replaced by scm_tc16_real.
830 scm_tc_dblc - replaced by scm_tc16_complex.
831 scm_list_star - replaced by scm_cons_star.
832
36284627
DH
833** Deprecated: scm_makfromstr
834
835Use scm_mem2string instead.
836
311b6a3c
MV
837** Deprecated: scm_make_shared_substring
838
839Explicit shared substrings will disappear from Guile.
840
841Instead, "normal" strings will be implemented using sharing
842internally, combined with a copy-on-write strategy.
843
844** Deprecated: scm_read_only_string_p
845
846The concept of read-only strings will disappear in next release of
847Guile.
848
849** Deprecated: scm_sloppy_memq, scm_sloppy_memv, scm_sloppy_member
c299f186 850
311b6a3c 851Instead, use scm_c_memq or scm_memq, scm_memv, scm_member.
c299f186 852
dd0e04ed
KN
853** New functions: scm_call_0, scm_call_1, scm_call_2, scm_call_3
854
855Call a procedure with the indicated number of arguments.
856
857Example:
858
859 scm_call_1 (proc, arg1);
860
861** New functions: scm_apply_0, scm_apply_1, scm_apply_2, scm_apply_3
862
863Call a procedure with the indicated number of arguments and a list
864of arguments.
865
866Example:
867
868 scm_apply_1 (proc, arg1, args);
869
e235f2a6
KN
870** New functions: scm_list_1, scm_list_2, scm_list_3, scm_list_4, scm_list_5
871
872Create a list of the given number of elements.
873
874** Renamed function: scm_listify has been replaced by scm_list_n.
875
876** Deprecated macros: SCM_LIST0, SCM_LIST1, SCM_LIST2, SCM_LIST3, SCM_LIST4,
877SCM_LIST5, SCM_LIST6, SCM_LIST7, SCM_LIST8, SCM_LIST9.
878
879Use functions scm_list_N instead.
880
6fe692e9
MD
881** New function: scm_c_read (SCM port, void *buffer, scm_sizet size)
882
883Used by an application to read arbitrary number of bytes from a port.
884Same semantics as libc read, except that scm_c_read only returns less
885than SIZE bytes if at end-of-file.
886
887Warning: Doesn't update port line and column counts!
888
889** New function: scm_c_write (SCM port, const void *ptr, scm_sizet size)
890
891Used by an application to write arbitrary number of bytes to an SCM
892port. Similar semantics as libc write. However, unlike libc
893write, scm_c_write writes the requested number of bytes and has no
894return value.
895
896Warning: Doesn't update port line and column counts!
897
17f367e0
MV
898** New function: scm_init_guile ()
899
900In contrast to scm_boot_guile, scm_init_guile will return normally
901after initializing Guile. It is not available on all systems, tho.
902
23ade5e7
DH
903** New functions: scm_str2symbol, scm_mem2symbol
904
905The function scm_str2symbol takes a const char* pointing to a zero-terminated
906field of characters and creates a scheme symbol object from that C string.
907The function scm_mem2symbol takes a const char* and a number of characters and
908creates a symbol from the characters in that memory area.
909
17f367e0
MV
910** New functions: scm_primitive_make_property
911 scm_primitive_property_ref
912 scm_primitive_property_set_x
913 scm_primitive_property_del_x
914
915These functions implement a new way to deal with object properties.
916See libguile/properties.c for their documentation.
917
9d47a1e6
ML
918** New function: scm_done_free (long size)
919
920This function is the inverse of scm_done_malloc. Use it to report the
921amount of smob memory you free. The previous method, which involved
922calling scm_done_malloc with negative argument, was somewhat
923unintuitive (and is still available, of course).
924
79a3dafe
DH
925** New function: scm_c_memq (SCM obj, SCM list)
926
927This function provides a fast C level alternative for scm_memq for the case
928that the list parameter is known to be a proper list. The function is a
929replacement for scm_sloppy_memq, but is stricter in its requirements on its
930list input parameter, since for anything else but a proper list the function's
931behaviour is undefined - it may even crash or loop endlessly. Further, for
932the case that the object is not found in the list, scm_c_memq returns #f which
933is similar to scm_memq, but different from scm_sloppy_memq's behaviour.
934
6c0201ad 935** New functions: scm_remember_upto_here_1, scm_remember_upto_here_2,
5d2b97cd
DH
936scm_remember_upto_here
937
938These functions replace the function scm_remember.
939
940** Deprecated function: scm_remember
941
942Use one of the new functions scm_remember_upto_here_1,
943scm_remember_upto_here_2 or scm_remember_upto_here instead.
944
be54b15d
DH
945** New function: scm_allocate_string
946
947This function replaces the function scm_makstr.
948
949** Deprecated function: scm_makstr
950
951Use the new function scm_allocate_string instead.
952
32d0d4b1
DH
953** New global variable scm_gc_running_p introduced.
954
955Use this variable to find out if garbage collection is being executed. Up to
956now applications have used scm_gc_heap_lock to test if garbage collection was
957running, which also works because of the fact that up to know only the garbage
958collector has set this variable. But, this is an implementation detail that
959may change. Further, scm_gc_heap_lock is not set throughout gc, thus the use
960of this variable is (and has been) not fully safe anyway.
961
5b9eb8ae
DH
962** New macros: SCM_BITVECTOR_MAX_LENGTH, SCM_UVECTOR_MAX_LENGTH
963
964Use these instead of SCM_LENGTH_MAX.
965
6c0201ad 966** New macros: SCM_CONTINUATION_LENGTH, SCM_CCLO_LENGTH, SCM_STACK_LENGTH,
a6d9e5ab
DH
967SCM_STRING_LENGTH, SCM_SYMBOL_LENGTH, SCM_UVECTOR_LENGTH,
968SCM_BITVECTOR_LENGTH, SCM_VECTOR_LENGTH.
969
970Use these instead of SCM_LENGTH.
971
6c0201ad 972** New macros: SCM_SET_CONTINUATION_LENGTH, SCM_SET_STRING_LENGTH,
93778877
DH
973SCM_SET_SYMBOL_LENGTH, SCM_SET_VECTOR_LENGTH, SCM_SET_UVECTOR_LENGTH,
974SCM_SET_BITVECTOR_LENGTH
bc0eaf7b
DH
975
976Use these instead of SCM_SETLENGTH
977
6c0201ad 978** New macros: SCM_STRING_CHARS, SCM_SYMBOL_CHARS, SCM_CCLO_BASE,
a6d9e5ab
DH
979SCM_VECTOR_BASE, SCM_UVECTOR_BASE, SCM_BITVECTOR_BASE, SCM_COMPLEX_MEM,
980SCM_ARRAY_MEM
981
e51fe79c
DH
982Use these instead of SCM_CHARS, SCM_UCHARS, SCM_ROCHARS, SCM_ROUCHARS or
983SCM_VELTS.
a6d9e5ab 984
6c0201ad 985** New macros: SCM_SET_BIGNUM_BASE, SCM_SET_STRING_CHARS,
6a0476fd
DH
986SCM_SET_SYMBOL_CHARS, SCM_SET_UVECTOR_BASE, SCM_SET_BITVECTOR_BASE,
987SCM_SET_VECTOR_BASE
988
989Use these instead of SCM_SETCHARS.
990
a6d9e5ab
DH
991** New macro: SCM_BITVECTOR_P
992
993** New macro: SCM_STRING_COERCE_0TERMINATION_X
994
995Use instead of SCM_COERCE_SUBSTR.
996
30ea841d
DH
997** New macros: SCM_DIR_OPEN_P, SCM_DIR_FLAG_OPEN
998
999For directory objects, use these instead of SCM_OPDIRP and SCM_OPN.
1000
6c0201ad
TTN
1001** Deprecated macros: SCM_OUTOFRANGE, SCM_NALLOC, SCM_HUP_SIGNAL,
1002SCM_INT_SIGNAL, SCM_FPE_SIGNAL, SCM_BUS_SIGNAL, SCM_SEGV_SIGNAL,
1003SCM_ALRM_SIGNAL, SCM_GC_SIGNAL, SCM_TICK_SIGNAL, SCM_SIG_ORD,
d1ca2c64 1004SCM_ORD_SIG, SCM_NUM_SIGS, SCM_SYMBOL_SLOTS, SCM_SLOTS, SCM_SLOPPY_STRINGP,
a6d9e5ab
DH
1005SCM_VALIDATE_STRINGORSUBSTR, SCM_FREEP, SCM_NFREEP, SCM_CHARS, SCM_UCHARS,
1006SCM_VALIDATE_ROSTRING, SCM_VALIDATE_ROSTRING_COPY,
1007SCM_VALIDATE_NULLORROSTRING_COPY, SCM_ROLENGTH, SCM_LENGTH, SCM_HUGE_LENGTH,
b24b5e13 1008SCM_SUBSTRP, SCM_SUBSTR_STR, SCM_SUBSTR_OFFSET, SCM_COERCE_SUBSTR,
34f0f2b8 1009SCM_ROSTRINGP, SCM_RWSTRINGP, SCM_VALIDATE_RWSTRING, SCM_ROCHARS,
fd336365 1010SCM_ROUCHARS, SCM_SETLENGTH, SCM_SETCHARS, SCM_LENGTH_MAX, SCM_GC8MARKP,
30ea841d 1011SCM_SETGC8MARK, SCM_CLRGC8MARK, SCM_GCTYP16, SCM_GCCDR, SCM_SUBR_DOC,
b3fcac34
DH
1012SCM_OPDIRP, SCM_VALIDATE_OPDIR, SCM_WTA, RETURN_SCM_WTA, SCM_CONST_LONG,
1013SCM_WNA, SCM_FUNC_NAME, SCM_VALIDATE_NUMBER_COPY,
61045190 1014SCM_VALIDATE_NUMBER_DEF_COPY, SCM_SLOPPY_CONSP, SCM_SLOPPY_NCONSP,
e038c042 1015SCM_SETAND_CDR, SCM_SETOR_CDR, SCM_SETAND_CAR, SCM_SETOR_CAR
b63a956d
DH
1016
1017Use SCM_ASSERT_RANGE or SCM_VALIDATE_XXX_RANGE instead of SCM_OUTOFRANGE.
1018Use scm_memory_error instead of SCM_NALLOC.
c1aef037 1019Use SCM_STRINGP instead of SCM_SLOPPY_STRINGP.
d1ca2c64
DH
1020Use SCM_VALIDATE_STRING instead of SCM_VALIDATE_STRINGORSUBSTR.
1021Use SCM_FREE_CELL_P instead of SCM_FREEP/SCM_NFREEP
a6d9e5ab 1022Use a type specific accessor macro instead of SCM_CHARS/SCM_UCHARS.
6c0201ad 1023Use a type specific accessor instead of SCM(_|_RO|_HUGE_)LENGTH.
a6d9e5ab
DH
1024Use SCM_VALIDATE_(SYMBOL|STRING) instead of SCM_VALIDATE_ROSTRING.
1025Use SCM_STRING_COERCE_0TERMINATION_X instead of SCM_COERCE_SUBSTR.
b24b5e13 1026Use SCM_STRINGP or SCM_SYMBOLP instead of SCM_ROSTRINGP.
f0942910
DH
1027Use SCM_STRINGP instead of SCM_RWSTRINGP.
1028Use SCM_VALIDATE_STRING instead of SCM_VALIDATE_RWSTRING.
34f0f2b8
DH
1029Use SCM_STRING_CHARS instead of SCM_ROCHARS.
1030Use SCM_STRING_UCHARS instead of SCM_ROUCHARS.
93778877 1031Use a type specific setter macro instead of SCM_SETLENGTH.
6a0476fd 1032Use a type specific setter macro instead of SCM_SETCHARS.
5b9eb8ae 1033Use a type specific length macro instead of SCM_LENGTH_MAX.
fd336365
DH
1034Use SCM_GCMARKP instead of SCM_GC8MARKP.
1035Use SCM_SETGCMARK instead of SCM_SETGC8MARK.
1036Use SCM_CLRGCMARK instead of SCM_CLRGC8MARK.
1037Use SCM_TYP16 instead of SCM_GCTYP16.
1038Use SCM_CDR instead of SCM_GCCDR.
30ea841d 1039Use SCM_DIR_OPEN_P instead of SCM_OPDIRP.
276dd677
DH
1040Use SCM_MISC_ERROR or SCM_WRONG_TYPE_ARG instead of SCM_WTA.
1041Use SCM_MISC_ERROR or SCM_WRONG_TYPE_ARG instead of RETURN_SCM_WTA.
8dea8611 1042Use SCM_VCELL_INIT instead of SCM_CONST_LONG.
b3fcac34 1043Use SCM_WRONG_NUM_ARGS instead of SCM_WNA.
ced99e92
DH
1044Use SCM_CONSP instead of SCM_SLOPPY_CONSP.
1045Use !SCM_CONSP instead of SCM_SLOPPY_NCONSP.
b63a956d 1046
f7620510
DH
1047** Removed function: scm_struct_init
1048
93d40df2
DH
1049** Removed variable: scm_symhash_dim
1050
818febc0
GH
1051** Renamed function: scm_make_cont has been replaced by
1052scm_make_continuation, which has a different interface.
1053
cc4feeca
DH
1054** Deprecated function: scm_call_catching_errors
1055
1056Use scm_catch or scm_lazy_catch from throw.[ch] instead.
1057
28b06554
DH
1058** Deprecated function: scm_strhash
1059
1060Use scm_string_hash instead.
1061
1b9be268
DH
1062** Deprecated function: scm_vector_set_length_x
1063
1064Instead, create a fresh vector of the desired size and copy the contents.
1065
302f229e
MD
1066** scm_gensym has changed prototype
1067
1068scm_gensym now only takes one argument.
1069
1660782e
DH
1070** Deprecated type tags: scm_tc7_ssymbol, scm_tc7_msymbol, scm_tcs_symbols,
1071scm_tc7_lvector
28b06554
DH
1072
1073There is now only a single symbol type scm_tc7_symbol.
1660782e 1074The tag scm_tc7_lvector was not used anyway.
28b06554 1075
2f6fb7c5
KN
1076** Deprecated function: scm_make_smob_type_mfpe, scm_set_smob_mfpe.
1077
1078Use scm_make_smob_type and scm_set_smob_XXX instead.
1079
1080** New function scm_set_smob_apply.
1081
1082This can be used to set an apply function to a smob type.
1083
1f3908c4
KN
1084** Deprecated function: scm_strprint_obj
1085
1086Use scm_object_to_string instead.
1087
b3fcac34
DH
1088** Deprecated function: scm_wta
1089
1090Use scm_wrong_type_arg, or another appropriate error signalling function
1091instead.
1092
f3f9dcbc
MV
1093** Explicit support for obarrays has been deprecated.
1094
1095Use `scm_str2symbol' and the generic hashtable functions instead.
1096
1097** The concept of `vcells' has been deprecated.
1098
1099The data type `variable' is now used exclusively. `Vcells' have been
1100a low-level concept so you are likely not affected by this change.
1101
1102*** Deprecated functions: scm_sym2vcell, scm_sysintern,
1103 scm_sysintern0, scm_symbol_value0, scm_intern, scm_intern0.
1104
1105Use scm_c_define or scm_c_lookup instead, as appropriate.
1106
1107*** New functions: scm_c_module_lookup, scm_c_lookup,
1108 scm_c_module_define, scm_c_define, scm_module_lookup, scm_lookup,
1109 scm_module_define, scm_define.
1110
1111These functions work with variables instead of with vcells.
1112
311b6a3c
MV
1113** New functions for creating and defining `subr's and `gsubr's.
1114
1115The new functions more clearly distinguish between creating a subr (or
1116gsubr) object and adding it to the current module.
1117
1118These new functions are available: scm_c_make_subr, scm_c_define_subr,
1119scm_c_make_subr_with_generic, scm_c_define_subr_with_generic,
1120scm_c_make_gsubr, scm_c_define_gsubr, scm_c_make_gsubr_with_generic,
1121scm_c_define_gsubr_with_generic.
1122
1123** Deprecated functions: scm_make_subr, scm_make_subr_opt,
1124 scm_make_subr_with_generic, scm_make_gsubr,
1125 scm_make_gsubr_with_generic.
1126
1127Use the new ones from above instead.
1128
1129** C interface to the module system has changed.
1130
1131While we suggest that you avoid as many explicit module system
1132operations from C as possible for the time being, the C interface has
1133been made more similar to the high-level Scheme module system.
1134
1135*** New functions: scm_c_define_module, scm_c_use_module,
1136 scm_c_export, scm_c_resolve_module.
1137
1138They mostly work like their Scheme namesakes. scm_c_define_module
1139takes a function that is called a context where the new module is
1140current.
1141
1142*** Deprecated functions: scm_the_root_module, scm_make_module,
1143 scm_ensure_user_module, scm_load_scheme_module.
1144
1145Use the new functions instead.
1146
1147** Renamed function: scm_internal_with_fluids becomes
1148 scm_c_with_fluids.
1149
1150scm_internal_with_fluids is available as a deprecated function.
1151
1152** New function: scm_c_with_fluid.
1153
1154Just like scm_c_with_fluids, but takes one fluid and one value instead
1155of lists of same.
1156
1be6b49c
ML
1157** Deprecated typedefs: long_long, ulong_long.
1158
1159They are of questionable utility and they pollute the global
1160namespace.
1161
1be6b49c
ML
1162** Deprecated typedef: scm_sizet
1163
1164It is of questionable utility now that Guile requires ANSI C, and is
1165oddly named.
1166
1167** Deprecated typedefs: scm_port_rw_active, scm_port,
1168 scm_ptob_descriptor, scm_debug_info, scm_debug_frame, scm_fport,
1169 scm_option, scm_rstate, scm_rng, scm_array, scm_array_dim.
1170
1171Made more compliant with the naming policy by adding a _t at the end.
1172
1173** Deprecated functions: scm_mkbig, scm_big2num, scm_adjbig,
1174 scm_normbig, scm_copybig, scm_2ulong2big, scm_dbl2big, scm_big2dbl
1175
373f4948 1176With the exception of the mysterious scm_2ulong2big, they are still
1be6b49c
ML
1177available under new names (scm_i_mkbig etc). These functions are not
1178intended to be used in user code. You should avoid dealing with
1179bignums directly, and should deal with numbers in general (which can
1180be bignums).
1181
1182** New functions: scm_short2num, scm_ushort2num, scm_int2num,
f3f70257
ML
1183 scm_uint2num, scm_size2num, scm_ptrdiff2num, scm_num2short,
1184 scm_num2ushort, scm_num2int, scm_num2uint, scm_num2ptrdiff,
1be6b49c
ML
1185 scm_num2size.
1186
1187These are conversion functions between the various ANSI C integral
1188types and Scheme numbers.
1189
1190** New number validation macros:
f3f70257 1191 SCM_NUM2{SIZE,PTRDIFF,SHORT,USHORT,INT,UINT}[_DEF]
1be6b49c
ML
1192
1193See above.
1194
fc62c86a
ML
1195** New functions: scm_gc_protect_object, scm_gc_unprotect_object
1196
1197These are just nicer-named old scm_protect_object and
1198scm_unprotect_object.
1199
1200** Deprecated functions: scm_protect_object, scm_unprotect_object
1201
1202** New functions: scm_gc_[un]register_root, scm_gc_[un]register_roots
1203
1204These functions can be used to register pointers to locations that
1205hold SCM values.
1206
5b2ad23b
ML
1207** Deprecated function: scm_create_hook.
1208
1209Its sins are: misleading name, non-modularity and lack of general
1210usefulness.
1211
c299f186 1212\f
cc36e791
JB
1213Changes since Guile 1.3.4:
1214
80f27102
JB
1215* Changes to the distribution
1216
ce358662
JB
1217** Trees from nightly snapshots and CVS now require you to run autogen.sh.
1218
1219We've changed the way we handle generated files in the Guile source
1220repository. As a result, the procedure for building trees obtained
1221from the nightly FTP snapshots or via CVS has changed:
1222- You must have appropriate versions of autoconf, automake, and
1223 libtool installed on your system. See README for info on how to
1224 obtain these programs.
1225- Before configuring the tree, you must first run the script
1226 `autogen.sh' at the top of the source tree.
1227
1228The Guile repository used to contain not only source files, written by
1229humans, but also some generated files, like configure scripts and
1230Makefile.in files. Even though the contents of these files could be
1231derived mechanically from other files present, we thought it would
1232make the tree easier to build if we checked them into CVS.
1233
1234However, this approach means that minor differences between
1235developer's installed tools and habits affected the whole team.
1236So we have removed the generated files from the repository, and
1237added the autogen.sh script, which will reconstruct them
1238appropriately.
1239
1240
dc914156
GH
1241** configure now has experimental options to remove support for certain
1242features:
52cfc69b 1243
dc914156
GH
1244--disable-arrays omit array and uniform array support
1245--disable-posix omit posix interfaces
1246--disable-networking omit networking interfaces
1247--disable-regex omit regular expression interfaces
52cfc69b
GH
1248
1249These are likely to become separate modules some day.
1250
9764c29b 1251** New configure option --enable-debug-freelist
e1b0d0ac 1252
38a15cfd
GB
1253This enables a debugging version of SCM_NEWCELL(), and also registers
1254an extra primitive, the setter `gc-set-debug-check-freelist!'.
1255
1256Configure with the --enable-debug-freelist option to enable
1257the gc-set-debug-check-freelist! primitive, and then use:
1258
1259(gc-set-debug-check-freelist! #t) # turn on checking of the freelist
1260(gc-set-debug-check-freelist! #f) # turn off checking
1261
1262Checking of the freelist forces a traversal of the freelist and
1263a garbage collection before each allocation of a cell. This can
1264slow down the interpreter dramatically, so the setter should be used to
1265turn on this extra processing only when necessary.
e1b0d0ac 1266
9764c29b
MD
1267** New configure option --enable-debug-malloc
1268
1269Include code for debugging of calls to scm_must_malloc/realloc/free.
1270
1271Checks that
1272
12731. objects freed by scm_must_free has been mallocated by scm_must_malloc
12742. objects reallocated by scm_must_realloc has been allocated by
1275 scm_must_malloc
12763. reallocated objects are reallocated with the same what string
1277
1278But, most importantly, it records the number of allocated objects of
1279each kind. This is useful when searching for memory leaks.
1280
1281A Guile compiled with this option provides the primitive
1282`malloc-stats' which returns an alist with pairs of kind and the
1283number of objects of that kind.
1284
e415cb06
MD
1285** All includes are now referenced relative to the root directory
1286
1287Since some users have had problems with mixups between Guile and
1288system headers, we have decided to always refer to Guile headers via
1289their parent directories. This essentially creates a "private name
1290space" for Guile headers. This means that the compiler only is given
1291-I options for the root build and root source directory.
1292
341f78c9
MD
1293** Header files kw.h and genio.h have been removed.
1294
1295** The module (ice-9 getopt-gnu-style) has been removed.
1296
e8855f8d
MD
1297** New module (ice-9 documentation)
1298
1299Implements the interface to documentation strings associated with
1300objects.
1301
0c0ffe09
KN
1302** New module (ice-9 time)
1303
1304Provides a macro `time', which displays execution time of a given form.
1305
cf7a5ee5
KN
1306** New module (ice-9 history)
1307
1308Loading this module enables value history in the repl.
1309
0af43c4a 1310* Changes to the stand-alone interpreter
bd9e24b3 1311
67ef2dca
MD
1312** New command line option --debug
1313
1314Start Guile with debugging evaluator and backtraces enabled.
1315
1316This is useful when debugging your .guile init file or scripts.
1317
aa4bb95d
MD
1318** New help facility
1319
341f78c9
MD
1320Usage: (help NAME) gives documentation about objects named NAME (a symbol)
1321 (help REGEXP) ditto for objects with names matching REGEXP (a string)
58e5b910 1322 (help 'NAME) gives documentation for NAME, even if it is not an object
341f78c9 1323 (help ,EXPR) gives documentation for object returned by EXPR
6c0201ad 1324 (help (my module)) gives module commentary for `(my module)'
341f78c9
MD
1325 (help) gives this text
1326
1327`help' searches among bindings exported from loaded modules, while
1328`apropos' searches among bindings visible from the "current" module.
1329
1330Examples: (help help)
1331 (help cons)
1332 (help "output-string")
aa4bb95d 1333
e8855f8d
MD
1334** `help' and `apropos' now prints full module names
1335
0af43c4a 1336** Dynamic linking now uses libltdl from the libtool package.
bd9e24b3 1337
0af43c4a
MD
1338The old system dependent code for doing dynamic linking has been
1339replaced with calls to the libltdl functions which do all the hairy
1340details for us.
bd9e24b3 1341
0af43c4a
MD
1342The major improvement is that you can now directly pass libtool
1343library names like "libfoo.la" to `dynamic-link' and `dynamic-link'
1344will be able to do the best shared library job you can get, via
1345libltdl.
bd9e24b3 1346
0af43c4a
MD
1347The way dynamic libraries are found has changed and is not really
1348portable across platforms, probably. It is therefore recommended to
1349use absolute filenames when possible.
1350
1351If you pass a filename without an extension to `dynamic-link', it will
1352try a few appropriate ones. Thus, the most platform ignorant way is
1353to specify a name like "libfoo", without any directories and
1354extensions.
0573ddae 1355
91163914
MD
1356** Guile COOP threads are now compatible with LinuxThreads
1357
1358Previously, COOP threading wasn't possible in applications linked with
1359Linux POSIX threads due to their use of the stack pointer to find the
1360thread context. This has now been fixed with a workaround which uses
1361the pthreads to allocate the stack.
1362
6c0201ad 1363** New primitives: `pkgdata-dir', `site-dir', `library-dir'
62b82274 1364
9770d235
MD
1365** Positions of erring expression in scripts
1366
1367With version 1.3.4, the location of the erring expression in Guile
1368scipts is no longer automatically reported. (This should have been
1369documented before the 1.3.4 release.)
1370
1371You can get this information by enabling recording of positions of
1372source expressions and running the debugging evaluator. Put this at
1373the top of your script (or in your "site" file):
1374
1375 (read-enable 'positions)
1376 (debug-enable 'debug)
1377
0573ddae
MD
1378** Backtraces in scripts
1379
1380It is now possible to get backtraces in scripts.
1381
1382Put
1383
1384 (debug-enable 'debug 'backtrace)
1385
1386at the top of the script.
1387
1388(The first options enables the debugging evaluator.
1389 The second enables backtraces.)
1390
e8855f8d
MD
1391** Part of module system symbol lookup now implemented in C
1392
1393The eval closure of most modules is now implemented in C. Since this
1394was one of the bottlenecks for loading speed, Guile now loads code
1395substantially faster than before.
1396
f25f761d
GH
1397** Attempting to get the value of an unbound variable now produces
1398an exception with a key of 'unbound-variable instead of 'misc-error.
1399
1a35eadc
GH
1400** The initial default output port is now unbuffered if it's using a
1401tty device. Previously in this situation it was line-buffered.
1402
820920e6
MD
1403** New hook: after-gc-hook
1404
1405after-gc-hook takes over the role of gc-thunk. This hook is run at
1406the first SCM_TICK after a GC. (Thus, the code is run at the same
1407point during evaluation as signal handlers.)
1408
1409Note that this hook should be used only for diagnostic and debugging
1410purposes. It is not certain that it will continue to be well-defined
1411when this hook is run in the future.
1412
1413C programmers: Note the new C level hooks scm_before_gc_c_hook,
1414scm_before_sweep_c_hook, scm_after_gc_c_hook.
1415
b5074b23
MD
1416** Improvements to garbage collector
1417
1418Guile 1.4 has a new policy for triggering heap allocation and
1419determining the sizes of heap segments. It fixes a number of problems
1420in the old GC.
1421
14221. The new policy can handle two separate pools of cells
1423 (2-word/4-word) better. (The old policy would run wild, allocating
1424 more and more memory for certain programs.)
1425
14262. The old code would sometimes allocate far too much heap so that the
1427 Guile process became gigantic. The new code avoids this.
1428
14293. The old code would sometimes allocate too little so that few cells
1430 were freed at GC so that, in turn, too much time was spent in GC.
1431
14324. The old code would often trigger heap allocation several times in a
1433 row. (The new scheme predicts how large the segments needs to be
1434 in order not to need further allocation.)
1435
e8855f8d
MD
1436All in all, the new GC policy will make larger applications more
1437efficient.
1438
b5074b23
MD
1439The new GC scheme also is prepared for POSIX threading. Threads can
1440allocate private pools of cells ("clusters") with just a single
1441function call. Allocation of single cells from such a cluster can
1442then proceed without any need of inter-thread synchronization.
1443
1444** New environment variables controlling GC parameters
1445
1446GUILE_MAX_SEGMENT_SIZE Maximal segment size
1447 (default = 2097000)
1448
1449Allocation of 2-word cell heaps:
1450
1451GUILE_INIT_SEGMENT_SIZE_1 Size of initial heap segment in bytes
1452 (default = 360000)
1453
1454GUILE_MIN_YIELD_1 Minimum number of freed cells at each
1455 GC in percent of total heap size
1456 (default = 40)
1457
1458Allocation of 4-word cell heaps
1459(used for real numbers and misc other objects):
1460
1461GUILE_INIT_SEGMENT_SIZE_2, GUILE_MIN_YIELD_2
1462
1463(See entry "Way for application to customize GC parameters" under
1464 section "Changes to the scm_ interface" below.)
1465
67ef2dca
MD
1466** Guile now implements reals using 4-word cells
1467
1468This speeds up computation with reals. (They were earlier allocated
1469with `malloc'.) There is still some room for optimizations, however.
1470
1471** Some further steps toward POSIX thread support have been taken
1472
1473*** Guile's critical sections (SCM_DEFER/ALLOW_INTS)
1474don't have much effect any longer, and many of them will be removed in
1475next release.
1476
1477*** Signals
1478are only handled at the top of the evaluator loop, immediately after
1479I/O, and in scm_equalp.
1480
1481*** The GC can allocate thread private pools of pairs.
1482
0af43c4a
MD
1483* Changes to Scheme functions and syntax
1484
a0128ebe 1485** close-input-port and close-output-port are now R5RS
7c1e0b12 1486
a0128ebe 1487These procedures have been turned into primitives and have R5RS behaviour.
7c1e0b12 1488
0af43c4a
MD
1489** New procedure: simple-format PORT MESSAGE ARG1 ...
1490
1491(ice-9 boot) makes `format' an alias for `simple-format' until possibly
1492extended by the more sophisticated version in (ice-9 format)
1493
1494(simple-format port message . args)
1495Write MESSAGE to DESTINATION, defaulting to `current-output-port'.
1496MESSAGE can contain ~A (was %s) and ~S (was %S) escapes. When printed,
1497the escapes are replaced with corresponding members of ARGS:
1498~A formats using `display' and ~S formats using `write'.
1499If DESTINATION is #t, then use the `current-output-port',
1500if DESTINATION is #f, then return a string containing the formatted text.
1501Does not add a trailing newline."
1502
1503** string-ref: the second argument is no longer optional.
1504
1505** string, list->string: no longer accept strings in their arguments,
1506only characters, for compatibility with R5RS.
1507
1508** New procedure: port-closed? PORT
1509Returns #t if PORT is closed or #f if it is open.
1510
0a9e521f
MD
1511** Deprecated: list*
1512
1513The list* functionality is now provided by cons* (SRFI-1 compliant)
1514
b5074b23
MD
1515** New procedure: cons* ARG1 ARG2 ... ARGn
1516
1517Like `list', but the last arg provides the tail of the constructed list,
1518returning (cons ARG1 (cons ARG2 (cons ... ARGn))).
1519
1520Requires at least one argument. If given one argument, that argument
1521is returned as result.
1522
1523This function is called `list*' in some other Schemes and in Common LISP.
1524
341f78c9
MD
1525** Removed deprecated: serial-map, serial-array-copy!, serial-array-map!
1526
e8855f8d
MD
1527** New procedure: object-documentation OBJECT
1528
1529Returns the documentation string associated with OBJECT. The
1530procedure uses a caching mechanism so that subsequent lookups are
1531faster.
1532
1533Exported by (ice-9 documentation).
1534
1535** module-name now returns full names of modules
1536
1537Previously, only the last part of the name was returned (`session' for
1538`(ice-9 session)'). Ex: `(ice-9 session)'.
1539
894a712b
DH
1540* Changes to the gh_ interface
1541
1542** Deprecated: gh_int2scmb
1543
1544Use gh_bool2scm instead.
1545
a2349a28
GH
1546* Changes to the scm_ interface
1547
810e1aec
MD
1548** Guile primitives now carry docstrings!
1549
1550Thanks to Greg Badros!
1551
0a9e521f 1552** Guile primitives are defined in a new way: SCM_DEFINE/SCM_DEFINE1/SCM_PROC
0af43c4a 1553
0a9e521f
MD
1554Now Guile primitives are defined using the SCM_DEFINE/SCM_DEFINE1/SCM_PROC
1555macros and must contain a docstring that is extracted into foo.doc using a new
0af43c4a
MD
1556guile-doc-snarf script (that uses guile-doc-snarf.awk).
1557
0a9e521f
MD
1558However, a major overhaul of these macros is scheduled for the next release of
1559guile.
1560
0af43c4a
MD
1561** Guile primitives use a new technique for validation of arguments
1562
1563SCM_VALIDATE_* macros are defined to ease the redundancy and improve
1564the readability of argument checking.
1565
1566** All (nearly?) K&R prototypes for functions replaced with ANSI C equivalents.
1567
894a712b 1568** New macros: SCM_PACK, SCM_UNPACK
f8a72ca4
MD
1569
1570Compose/decompose an SCM value.
1571
894a712b
DH
1572The SCM type is now treated as an abstract data type and may be defined as a
1573long, a void* or as a struct, depending on the architecture and compile time
1574options. This makes it easier to find several types of bugs, for example when
1575SCM values are treated as integers without conversion. Values of the SCM type
1576should be treated as "atomic" values. These macros are used when
f8a72ca4
MD
1577composing/decomposing an SCM value, either because you want to access
1578individual bits, or because you want to treat it as an integer value.
1579
1580E.g., in order to set bit 7 in an SCM value x, use the expression
1581
1582 SCM_PACK (SCM_UNPACK (x) | 0x80)
1583
e11f8b42
DH
1584** The name property of hooks is deprecated.
1585Thus, the use of SCM_HOOK_NAME and scm_make_hook_with_name is deprecated.
1586
1587You can emulate this feature by using object properties.
1588
6c0201ad 1589** Deprecated macros: SCM_INPORTP, SCM_OUTPORTP, SCM_CRDY, SCM_ICHRP,
894a712b
DH
1590SCM_ICHR, SCM_MAKICHR, SCM_SETJMPBUF, SCM_NSTRINGP, SCM_NRWSTRINGP,
1591SCM_NVECTORP
f8a72ca4 1592
894a712b 1593These macros will be removed in a future release of Guile.
7c1e0b12 1594
6c0201ad 1595** The following types, functions and macros from numbers.h are deprecated:
0a9e521f
MD
1596scm_dblproc, SCM_UNEGFIXABLE, SCM_FLOBUFLEN, SCM_INEXP, SCM_CPLXP, SCM_REAL,
1597SCM_IMAG, SCM_REALPART, scm_makdbl, SCM_SINGP, SCM_NUM2DBL, SCM_NO_BIGDIG
1598
1599Further, it is recommended not to rely on implementation details for guile's
1600current implementation of bignums. It is planned to replace this
1601implementation with gmp in the future.
1602
a2349a28
GH
1603** Port internals: the rw_random variable in the scm_port structure
1604must be set to non-zero in any random access port. In recent Guile
1605releases it was only set for bidirectional random-access ports.
1606
7dcb364d
GH
1607** Port internals: the seek ptob procedure is now responsible for
1608resetting the buffers if required. The change was made so that in the
1609special case of reading the current position (i.e., seek p 0 SEEK_CUR)
1610the fport and strport ptobs can avoid resetting the buffers,
1611in particular to avoid discarding unread chars. An existing port
1612type can be fixed by adding something like the following to the
1613beginning of the ptob seek procedure:
1614
1615 if (pt->rw_active == SCM_PORT_READ)
1616 scm_end_input (object);
1617 else if (pt->rw_active == SCM_PORT_WRITE)
1618 ptob->flush (object);
1619
1620although to actually avoid resetting the buffers and discard unread
1621chars requires further hacking that depends on the characteristics
1622of the ptob.
1623
894a712b
DH
1624** Deprecated functions: scm_fseek, scm_tag
1625
1626These functions are no longer used and will be removed in a future version.
1627
f25f761d
GH
1628** The scm_sysmissing procedure is no longer used in libguile.
1629Unless it turns out to be unexpectedly useful to somebody, it will be
1630removed in a future version.
1631
0af43c4a
MD
1632** The format of error message strings has changed
1633
1634The two C procedures: scm_display_error and scm_error, as well as the
1635primitive `scm-error', now use scm_simple_format to do their work.
1636This means that the message strings of all code must be updated to use
1637~A where %s was used before, and ~S where %S was used before.
1638
1639During the period when there still are a lot of old Guiles out there,
1640you might want to support both old and new versions of Guile.
1641
1642There are basically two methods to achieve this. Both methods use
1643autoconf. Put
1644
1645 AC_CHECK_FUNCS(scm_simple_format)
1646
1647in your configure.in.
1648
1649Method 1: Use the string concatenation features of ANSI C's
1650 preprocessor.
1651
1652In C:
1653
1654#ifdef HAVE_SCM_SIMPLE_FORMAT
1655#define FMT_S "~S"
1656#else
1657#define FMT_S "%S"
1658#endif
1659
1660Then represent each of your error messages using a preprocessor macro:
1661
1662#define E_SPIDER_ERROR "There's a spider in your " ## FMT_S ## "!!!"
1663
1664In Scheme:
1665
1666(define fmt-s (if (defined? 'simple-format) "~S" "%S"))
1667(define make-message string-append)
1668
1669(define e-spider-error (make-message "There's a spider in your " fmt-s "!!!"))
1670
1671Method 2: Use the oldfmt function found in doc/oldfmt.c.
1672
1673In C:
1674
1675scm_misc_error ("picnic", scm_c_oldfmt0 ("There's a spider in your ~S!!!"),
1676 ...);
1677
1678In Scheme:
1679
1680(scm-error 'misc-error "picnic" (oldfmt "There's a spider in your ~S!!!")
1681 ...)
1682
1683
f3b5e185
MD
1684** Deprecated: coop_mutex_init, coop_condition_variable_init
1685
1686Don't use the functions coop_mutex_init and
1687coop_condition_variable_init. They will change.
1688
1689Use scm_mutex_init and scm_cond_init instead.
1690
f3b5e185
MD
1691** New function: int scm_cond_timedwait (scm_cond_t *COND, scm_mutex_t *MUTEX, const struct timespec *ABSTIME)
1692 `scm_cond_timedwait' atomically unlocks MUTEX and waits on
1693 COND, as `scm_cond_wait' does, but it also bounds the duration
1694 of the wait. If COND has not been signaled before time ABSTIME,
1695 the mutex MUTEX is re-acquired and `scm_cond_timedwait'
1696 returns the error code `ETIMEDOUT'.
1697
1698 The ABSTIME parameter specifies an absolute time, with the same
1699 origin as `time' and `gettimeofday': an ABSTIME of 0 corresponds
1700 to 00:00:00 GMT, January 1, 1970.
1701
1702** New function: scm_cond_broadcast (scm_cond_t *COND)
1703 `scm_cond_broadcast' restarts all the threads that are waiting
1704 on the condition variable COND. Nothing happens if no threads are
1705 waiting on COND.
1706
1707** New function: scm_key_create (scm_key_t *KEY, void (*destr_function) (void *))
1708 `scm_key_create' allocates a new TSD key. The key is stored in
1709 the location pointed to by KEY. There is no limit on the number
1710 of keys allocated at a given time. The value initially associated
1711 with the returned key is `NULL' in all currently executing threads.
1712
1713 The DESTR_FUNCTION argument, if not `NULL', specifies a destructor
1714 function associated with the key. When a thread terminates,
1715 DESTR_FUNCTION is called on the value associated with the key in
1716 that thread. The DESTR_FUNCTION is not called if a key is deleted
1717 with `scm_key_delete' or a value is changed with
1718 `scm_setspecific'. The order in which destructor functions are
1719 called at thread termination time is unspecified.
1720
1721 Destructors are not yet implemented.
1722
1723** New function: scm_setspecific (scm_key_t KEY, const void *POINTER)
1724 `scm_setspecific' changes the value associated with KEY in the
1725 calling thread, storing the given POINTER instead.
1726
1727** New function: scm_getspecific (scm_key_t KEY)
1728 `scm_getspecific' returns the value currently associated with
1729 KEY in the calling thread.
1730
1731** New function: scm_key_delete (scm_key_t KEY)
1732 `scm_key_delete' deallocates a TSD key. It does not check
1733 whether non-`NULL' values are associated with that key in the
1734 currently executing threads, nor call the destructor function
1735 associated with the key.
1736
820920e6
MD
1737** New function: scm_c_hook_init (scm_c_hook_t *HOOK, void *HOOK_DATA, scm_c_hook_type_t TYPE)
1738
1739Initialize a C level hook HOOK with associated HOOK_DATA and type
1740TYPE. (See scm_c_hook_run ().)
1741
1742** New function: scm_c_hook_add (scm_c_hook_t *HOOK, scm_c_hook_function_t FUNC, void *FUNC_DATA, int APPENDP)
1743
1744Add hook function FUNC with associated FUNC_DATA to HOOK. If APPENDP
1745is true, add it last, otherwise first. The same FUNC can be added
1746multiple times if FUNC_DATA differ and vice versa.
1747
1748** New function: scm_c_hook_remove (scm_c_hook_t *HOOK, scm_c_hook_function_t FUNC, void *FUNC_DATA)
1749
1750Remove hook function FUNC with associated FUNC_DATA from HOOK. A
1751function is only removed if both FUNC and FUNC_DATA matches.
1752
1753** New function: void *scm_c_hook_run (scm_c_hook_t *HOOK, void *DATA)
1754
1755Run hook HOOK passing DATA to the hook functions.
1756
1757If TYPE is SCM_C_HOOK_NORMAL, all hook functions are run. The value
1758returned is undefined.
1759
1760If TYPE is SCM_C_HOOK_OR, hook functions are run until a function
1761returns a non-NULL value. This value is returned as the result of
1762scm_c_hook_run. If all functions return NULL, NULL is returned.
1763
1764If TYPE is SCM_C_HOOK_AND, hook functions are run until a function
1765returns a NULL value, and NULL is returned. If all functions returns
1766a non-NULL value, the last value is returned.
1767
1768** New C level GC hooks
1769
1770Five new C level hooks has been added to the garbage collector.
1771
1772 scm_before_gc_c_hook
1773 scm_after_gc_c_hook
1774
1775are run before locking and after unlocking the heap. The system is
1776thus in a mode where evaluation can take place. (Except that
1777scm_before_gc_c_hook must not allocate new cells.)
1778
1779 scm_before_mark_c_hook
1780 scm_before_sweep_c_hook
1781 scm_after_sweep_c_hook
1782
1783are run when the heap is locked. These are intended for extension of
1784the GC in a modular fashion. Examples are the weaks and guardians
1785modules.
1786
b5074b23
MD
1787** Way for application to customize GC parameters
1788
1789The application can set up other default values for the GC heap
1790allocation parameters
1791
1792 GUILE_INIT_HEAP_SIZE_1, GUILE_MIN_YIELD_1,
1793 GUILE_INIT_HEAP_SIZE_2, GUILE_MIN_YIELD_2,
1794 GUILE_MAX_SEGMENT_SIZE,
1795
1796by setting
1797
1798 scm_default_init_heap_size_1, scm_default_min_yield_1,
1799 scm_default_init_heap_size_2, scm_default_min_yield_2,
1800 scm_default_max_segment_size
1801
1802respectively before callong scm_boot_guile.
1803
1804(See entry "New environment variables ..." in section
1805"Changes to the stand-alone interpreter" above.)
1806
9704841c
MD
1807** scm_protect_object/scm_unprotect_object now nest
1808
67ef2dca
MD
1809This means that you can call scm_protect_object multiple times on an
1810object and count on the object being protected until
1811scm_unprotect_object has been call the same number of times.
1812
1813The functions also have better time complexity.
1814
1815Still, it is usually possible to structure the application in a way
1816that you don't need to use these functions. For example, if you use a
1817protected standard Guile list to keep track of live objects rather
1818than some custom data type, objects will die a natural death when they
1819are no longer needed.
1820
0a9e521f
MD
1821** Deprecated type tags: scm_tc16_flo, scm_tc_flo, scm_tc_dblr, scm_tc_dblc
1822
1823Guile does not provide the float representation for inexact real numbers any
1824more. Now, only doubles are used to represent inexact real numbers. Further,
1825the tag names scm_tc_dblr and scm_tc_dblc have been changed to scm_tc16_real
1826and scm_tc16_complex, respectively.
1827
341f78c9
MD
1828** Removed deprecated type scm_smobfuns
1829
1830** Removed deprecated function scm_newsmob
1831
b5074b23
MD
1832** Warning: scm_make_smob_type_mfpe might become deprecated in a future release
1833
1834There is an ongoing discussion among the developers whether to
1835deprecate `scm_make_smob_type_mfpe' or not. Please use the current
1836standard interface (scm_make_smob_type, scm_set_smob_XXX) in new code
1837until this issue has been settled.
1838
341f78c9
MD
1839** Removed deprecated type tag scm_tc16_kw
1840
2728d7f4
MD
1841** Added type tag scm_tc16_keyword
1842
1843(This was introduced already in release 1.3.4 but was not documented
1844 until now.)
1845
67ef2dca
MD
1846** gdb_print now prints "*** Guile not initialized ***" until Guile initialized
1847
f25f761d
GH
1848* Changes to system call interfaces:
1849
28d77376
GH
1850** The "select" procedure now tests port buffers for the ability to
1851provide input or accept output. Previously only the underlying file
1852descriptors were checked.
1853
bd9e24b3
GH
1854** New variable PIPE_BUF: the maximum number of bytes that can be
1855atomically written to a pipe.
1856
f25f761d
GH
1857** If a facility is not available on the system when Guile is
1858compiled, the corresponding primitive procedure will not be defined.
1859Previously it would have been defined but would throw a system-error
1860exception if called. Exception handlers which catch this case may
1861need minor modification: an error will be thrown with key
1862'unbound-variable instead of 'system-error. Alternatively it's
1863now possible to use `defined?' to check whether the facility is
1864available.
1865
38c1d3c4 1866** Procedures which depend on the timezone should now give the correct
6c0201ad 1867result on systems which cache the TZ environment variable, even if TZ
38c1d3c4
GH
1868is changed without calling tzset.
1869
5c11cc9d
GH
1870* Changes to the networking interfaces:
1871
1872** New functions: htons, ntohs, htonl, ntohl: for converting short and
1873long integers between network and host format. For now, it's not
1874particularly convenient to do this kind of thing, but consider:
1875
1876(define write-network-long
1877 (lambda (value port)
1878 (let ((v (make-uniform-vector 1 1 0)))
1879 (uniform-vector-set! v 0 (htonl value))
1880 (uniform-vector-write v port))))
1881
1882(define read-network-long
1883 (lambda (port)
1884 (let ((v (make-uniform-vector 1 1 0)))
1885 (uniform-vector-read! v port)
1886 (ntohl (uniform-vector-ref v 0)))))
1887
1888** If inet-aton fails, it now throws an error with key 'misc-error
1889instead of 'system-error, since errno is not relevant.
1890
1891** Certain gethostbyname/gethostbyaddr failures now throw errors with
1892specific keys instead of 'system-error. The latter is inappropriate
1893since errno will not have been set. The keys are:
afe5177e 1894'host-not-found, 'try-again, 'no-recovery and 'no-data.
5c11cc9d
GH
1895
1896** sethostent, setnetent, setprotoent, setservent: now take an
1897optional argument STAYOPEN, which specifies whether the database
1898remains open after a database entry is accessed randomly (e.g., using
1899gethostbyname for the hosts database.) The default is #f. Previously
1900#t was always used.
1901
cc36e791 1902\f
43fa9a05
JB
1903Changes since Guile 1.3.2:
1904
0fdcbcaa
MD
1905* Changes to the stand-alone interpreter
1906
1907** Debugger
1908
1909An initial version of the Guile debugger written by Chris Hanson has
1910been added. The debugger is still under development but is included
1911in the distribution anyway since it is already quite useful.
1912
1913Type
1914
1915 (debug)
1916
1917after an error to enter the debugger. Type `help' inside the debugger
1918for a description of available commands.
1919
1920If you prefer to have stack frames numbered and printed in
1921anti-chronological order and prefer up in the stack to be down on the
1922screen as is the case in gdb, you can put
1923
1924 (debug-enable 'backwards)
1925
1926in your .guile startup file. (However, this means that Guile can't
1927use indentation to indicate stack level.)
1928
1929The debugger is autoloaded into Guile at the first use.
1930
1931** Further enhancements to backtraces
1932
1933There is a new debug option `width' which controls the maximum width
1934on the screen of printed stack frames. Fancy printing parameters
1935("level" and "length" as in Common LISP) are adaptively adjusted for
1936each stack frame to give maximum information while still fitting
1937within the bounds. If the stack frame can't be made to fit by
1938adjusting parameters, it is simply cut off at the end. This is marked
1939with a `$'.
1940
1941** Some modules are now only loaded when the repl is started
1942
1943The modules (ice-9 debug), (ice-9 session), (ice-9 threads) and (ice-9
1944regex) are now loaded into (guile-user) only if the repl has been
1945started. The effect is that the startup time for scripts has been
1946reduced to 30% of what it was previously.
1947
1948Correctly written scripts load the modules they require at the top of
1949the file and should not be affected by this change.
1950
ece41168
MD
1951** Hooks are now represented as smobs
1952
6822fe53
MD
1953* Changes to Scheme functions and syntax
1954
0ce204b0
MV
1955** Readline support has changed again.
1956
1957The old (readline-activator) module is gone. Use (ice-9 readline)
1958instead, which now contains all readline functionality. So the code
1959to activate readline is now
1960
1961 (use-modules (ice-9 readline))
1962 (activate-readline)
1963
1964This should work at any time, including from the guile prompt.
1965
5d195868
JB
1966To avoid confusion about the terms of Guile's license, please only
1967enable readline for your personal use; please don't make it the
1968default for others. Here is why we make this rather odd-sounding
1969request:
1970
1971Guile is normally licensed under a weakened form of the GNU General
1972Public License, which allows you to link code with Guile without
1973placing that code under the GPL. This exception is important to some
1974people.
1975
1976However, since readline is distributed under the GNU General Public
1977License, when you link Guile with readline, either statically or
1978dynamically, you effectively change Guile's license to the strict GPL.
1979Whenever you link any strictly GPL'd code into Guile, uses of Guile
1980which are normally permitted become forbidden. This is a rather
1981non-obvious consequence of the licensing terms.
1982
1983So, to make sure things remain clear, please let people choose for
1984themselves whether to link GPL'd libraries like readline with Guile.
1985
25b0654e
JB
1986** regexp-substitute/global has changed slightly, but incompatibly.
1987
1988If you include a function in the item list, the string of the match
1989object it receives is the same string passed to
1990regexp-substitute/global, not some suffix of that string.
1991Correspondingly, the match's positions are relative to the entire
1992string, not the suffix.
1993
1994If the regexp can match the empty string, the way matches are chosen
1995from the string has changed. regexp-substitute/global recognizes the
1996same set of matches that list-matches does; see below.
1997
1998** New function: list-matches REGEXP STRING [FLAGS]
1999
2000Return a list of match objects, one for every non-overlapping, maximal
2001match of REGEXP in STRING. The matches appear in left-to-right order.
2002list-matches only reports matches of the empty string if there are no
2003other matches which begin on, end at, or include the empty match's
2004position.
2005
2006If present, FLAGS is passed as the FLAGS argument to regexp-exec.
2007
2008** New function: fold-matches REGEXP STRING INIT PROC [FLAGS]
2009
2010For each match of REGEXP in STRING, apply PROC to the match object,
2011and the last value PROC returned, or INIT for the first call. Return
2012the last value returned by PROC. We apply PROC to the matches as they
2013appear from left to right.
2014
2015This function recognizes matches according to the same criteria as
2016list-matches.
2017
2018Thus, you could define list-matches like this:
2019
2020 (define (list-matches regexp string . flags)
2021 (reverse! (apply fold-matches regexp string '() cons flags)))
2022
2023If present, FLAGS is passed as the FLAGS argument to regexp-exec.
2024
bc848f7f
MD
2025** Hooks
2026
2027*** New function: hook? OBJ
2028
2029Return #t if OBJ is a hook, otherwise #f.
2030
ece41168
MD
2031*** New function: make-hook-with-name NAME [ARITY]
2032
2033Return a hook with name NAME and arity ARITY. The default value for
2034ARITY is 0. The only effect of NAME is that it will appear when the
2035hook object is printed to ease debugging.
2036
bc848f7f
MD
2037*** New function: hook-empty? HOOK
2038
2039Return #t if HOOK doesn't contain any procedures, otherwise #f.
2040
2041*** New function: hook->list HOOK
2042
2043Return a list of the procedures that are called when run-hook is
2044applied to HOOK.
2045
b074884f
JB
2046** `map' signals an error if its argument lists are not all the same length.
2047
2048This is the behavior required by R5RS, so this change is really a bug
2049fix. But it seems to affect a lot of people's code, so we're
2050mentioning it here anyway.
2051
6822fe53
MD
2052** Print-state handling has been made more transparent
2053
2054Under certain circumstances, ports are represented as a port with an
2055associated print state. Earlier, this pair was represented as a pair
2056(see "Some magic has been added to the printer" below). It is now
2057indistinguishable (almost; see `get-print-state') from a port on the
2058user level.
2059
2060*** New function: port-with-print-state OUTPUT-PORT PRINT-STATE
2061
2062Return a new port with the associated print state PRINT-STATE.
2063
2064*** New function: get-print-state OUTPUT-PORT
2065
2066Return the print state associated with this port if it exists,
2067otherwise return #f.
2068
340a8770 2069*** New function: directory-stream? OBJECT
77242ff9 2070
340a8770 2071Returns true iff OBJECT is a directory stream --- the sort of object
77242ff9
GH
2072returned by `opendir'.
2073
0fdcbcaa
MD
2074** New function: using-readline?
2075
2076Return #t if readline is in use in the current repl.
2077
26405bc1
MD
2078** structs will be removed in 1.4
2079
2080Structs will be replaced in Guile 1.4. We will merge GOOPS into Guile
2081and use GOOPS objects as the fundamental record type.
2082
49199eaa
MD
2083* Changes to the scm_ interface
2084
26405bc1
MD
2085** structs will be removed in 1.4
2086
2087The entire current struct interface (struct.c, struct.h) will be
2088replaced in Guile 1.4. We will merge GOOPS into libguile and use
2089GOOPS objects as the fundamental record type.
2090
49199eaa
MD
2091** The internal representation of subr's has changed
2092
2093Instead of giving a hint to the subr name, the CAR field of the subr
2094now contains an index to a subr entry in scm_subr_table.
2095
2096*** New variable: scm_subr_table
2097
2098An array of subr entries. A subr entry contains the name, properties
2099and documentation associated with the subr. The properties and
2100documentation slots are not yet used.
2101
2102** A new scheme for "forwarding" calls to a builtin to a generic function
2103
2104It is now possible to extend the functionality of some Guile
2105primitives by letting them defer a call to a GOOPS generic function on
240ed66f 2106argument mismatch. This means that there is no loss of efficiency in
daf516d6 2107normal evaluation.
49199eaa
MD
2108
2109Example:
2110
daf516d6 2111 (use-modules (oop goops)) ; Must be GOOPS version 0.2.
49199eaa
MD
2112 (define-method + ((x <string>) (y <string>))
2113 (string-append x y))
2114
86a4d62e
MD
2115+ will still be as efficient as usual in numerical calculations, but
2116can also be used for concatenating strings.
49199eaa 2117
86a4d62e 2118Who will be the first one to extend Guile's numerical tower to
daf516d6
MD
2119rationals? :) [OK, there a few other things to fix before this can
2120be made in a clean way.]
49199eaa
MD
2121
2122*** New snarf macros for defining primitives: SCM_GPROC, SCM_GPROC1
2123
2124 New macro: SCM_GPROC (CNAME, SNAME, REQ, OPT, VAR, CFUNC, GENERIC)
2125
2126 New macro: SCM_GPROC1 (CNAME, SNAME, TYPE, CFUNC, GENERIC)
2127
d02cafe7 2128These do the same job as SCM_PROC and SCM_PROC1, but they also define
49199eaa
MD
2129a variable GENERIC which can be used by the dispatch macros below.
2130
2131[This is experimental code which may change soon.]
2132
2133*** New macros for forwarding control to a generic on arg type error
2134
2135 New macro: SCM_WTA_DISPATCH_1 (GENERIC, ARG1, POS, SUBR)
2136
2137 New macro: SCM_WTA_DISPATCH_2 (GENERIC, ARG1, ARG2, POS, SUBR)
2138
2139These correspond to the scm_wta function call, and have the same
2140behaviour until the user has called the GOOPS primitive
2141`enable-primitive-generic!'. After that, these macros will apply the
2142generic function GENERIC to the argument(s) instead of calling
2143scm_wta.
2144
2145[This is experimental code which may change soon.]
2146
2147*** New macros for argument testing with generic dispatch
2148
2149 New macro: SCM_GASSERT1 (COND, GENERIC, ARG1, POS, SUBR)
2150
2151 New macro: SCM_GASSERT2 (COND, GENERIC, ARG1, ARG2, POS, SUBR)
2152
2153These correspond to the SCM_ASSERT macro, but will defer control to
2154GENERIC on error after `enable-primitive-generic!' has been called.
2155
2156[This is experimental code which may change soon.]
2157
2158** New function: SCM scm_eval_body (SCM body, SCM env)
2159
2160Evaluates the body of a special form.
2161
2162** The internal representation of struct's has changed
2163
2164Previously, four slots were allocated for the procedure(s) of entities
2165and operators. The motivation for this representation had to do with
2166the structure of the evaluator, the wish to support tail-recursive
2167generic functions, and efficiency. Since the generic function
2168dispatch mechanism has changed, there is no longer a need for such an
2169expensive representation, and the representation has been simplified.
2170
2171This should not make any difference for most users.
2172
2173** GOOPS support has been cleaned up.
2174
2175Some code has been moved from eval.c to objects.c and code in both of
2176these compilation units has been cleaned up and better structured.
2177
2178*** New functions for applying generic functions
2179
2180 New function: SCM scm_apply_generic (GENERIC, ARGS)
2181 New function: SCM scm_call_generic_0 (GENERIC)
2182 New function: SCM scm_call_generic_1 (GENERIC, ARG1)
2183 New function: SCM scm_call_generic_2 (GENERIC, ARG1, ARG2)
2184 New function: SCM scm_call_generic_3 (GENERIC, ARG1, ARG2, ARG3)
2185
ece41168
MD
2186** Deprecated function: scm_make_named_hook
2187
2188It is now replaced by:
2189
2190** New function: SCM scm_create_hook (const char *name, int arity)
2191
2192Creates a hook in the same way as make-hook above but also
2193binds a variable named NAME to it.
2194
2195This is the typical way of creating a hook from C code.
2196
2197Currently, the variable is created in the "current" module.
2198This might change when we get the new module system.
2199
2200[The behaviour is identical to scm_make_named_hook.]
2201
2202
43fa9a05 2203\f
f3227c7a
JB
2204Changes since Guile 1.3:
2205
6ca345f3
JB
2206* Changes to mailing lists
2207
2208** Some of the Guile mailing lists have moved to sourceware.cygnus.com.
2209
2210See the README file to find current addresses for all the Guile
2211mailing lists.
2212
d77fb593
JB
2213* Changes to the distribution
2214
1d335863
JB
2215** Readline support is no longer included with Guile by default.
2216
2217Based on the different license terms of Guile and Readline, we
2218concluded that Guile should not *by default* cause the linking of
2219Readline into an application program. Readline support is now offered
2220as a separate module, which is linked into an application only when
2221you explicitly specify it.
2222
2223Although Guile is GNU software, its distribution terms add a special
2224exception to the usual GNU General Public License (GPL). Guile's
2225license includes a clause that allows you to link Guile with non-free
2226programs. We add this exception so as not to put Guile at a
2227disadvantage vis-a-vis other extensibility packages that support other
2228languages.
2229
2230In contrast, the GNU Readline library is distributed under the GNU
2231General Public License pure and simple. This means that you may not
2232link Readline, even dynamically, into an application unless it is
2233distributed under a free software license that is compatible the GPL.
2234
2235Because of this difference in distribution terms, an application that
2236can use Guile may not be able to use Readline. Now users will be
2237explicitly offered two independent decisions about the use of these
2238two packages.
d77fb593 2239
0e8a8468
MV
2240You can activate the readline support by issuing
2241
2242 (use-modules (readline-activator))
2243 (activate-readline)
2244
2245from your ".guile" file, for example.
2246
e4eae9b1
MD
2247* Changes to the stand-alone interpreter
2248
67ad463a
MD
2249** All builtins now print as primitives.
2250Previously builtin procedures not belonging to the fundamental subr
2251types printed as #<compiled closure #<primitive-procedure gsubr-apply>>.
2252Now, they print as #<primitive-procedure NAME>.
2253
2254** Backtraces slightly more intelligible.
2255gsubr-apply and macro transformer application frames no longer appear
2256in backtraces.
2257
69c6acbb
JB
2258* Changes to Scheme functions and syntax
2259
2a52b429
MD
2260** Guile now correctly handles internal defines by rewriting them into
2261their equivalent letrec. Previously, internal defines would
2262incrementally add to the innermost environment, without checking
2263whether the restrictions specified in RnRS were met. This lead to the
2264correct behaviour when these restriction actually were met, but didn't
2265catch all illegal uses. Such an illegal use could lead to crashes of
2266the Guile interpreter or or other unwanted results. An example of
2267incorrect internal defines that made Guile behave erratically:
2268
2269 (let ()
2270 (define a 1)
2271 (define (b) a)
2272 (define c (1+ (b)))
2273 (define d 3)
2274
2275 (b))
2276
2277 => 2
2278
2279The problem with this example is that the definition of `c' uses the
2280value of `b' directly. This confuses the meoization machine of Guile
2281so that the second call of `b' (this time in a larger environment that
2282also contains bindings for `c' and `d') refers to the binding of `c'
2283instead of `a'. You could also make Guile crash with a variation on
2284this theme:
2285
2286 (define (foo flag)
2287 (define a 1)
2288 (define (b flag) (if flag a 1))
2289 (define c (1+ (b flag)))
2290 (define d 3)
2291
2292 (b #t))
2293
2294 (foo #f)
2295 (foo #t)
2296
2297From now on, Guile will issue an `Unbound variable: b' error message
2298for both examples.
2299
36d3d540
MD
2300** Hooks
2301
2302A hook contains a list of functions which should be called on
2303particular occasions in an existing program. Hooks are used for
2304customization.
2305
2306A window manager might have a hook before-window-map-hook. The window
2307manager uses the function run-hooks to call all functions stored in
2308before-window-map-hook each time a window is mapped. The user can
2309store functions in the hook using add-hook!.
2310
2311In Guile, hooks are first class objects.
2312
2313*** New function: make-hook [N_ARGS]
2314
2315Return a hook for hook functions which can take N_ARGS arguments.
2316The default value for N_ARGS is 0.
2317
ad91d6c3
MD
2318(See also scm_make_named_hook below.)
2319
36d3d540
MD
2320*** New function: add-hook! HOOK PROC [APPEND_P]
2321
2322Put PROC at the beginning of the list of functions stored in HOOK.
2323If APPEND_P is supplied, and non-false, put PROC at the end instead.
2324
2325PROC must be able to take the number of arguments specified when the
2326hook was created.
2327
2328If PROC already exists in HOOK, then remove it first.
2329
2330*** New function: remove-hook! HOOK PROC
2331
2332Remove PROC from the list of functions in HOOK.
2333
2334*** New function: reset-hook! HOOK
2335
2336Clear the list of hook functions stored in HOOK.
2337
2338*** New function: run-hook HOOK ARG1 ...
2339
2340Run all hook functions stored in HOOK with arguments ARG1 ... .
2341The number of arguments supplied must correspond to the number given
2342when the hook was created.
2343
56a19408
MV
2344** The function `dynamic-link' now takes optional keyword arguments.
2345 The only keyword argument that is currently defined is `:global
2346 BOOL'. With it, you can control whether the shared library will be
2347 linked in global mode or not. In global mode, the symbols from the
2348 linked library can be used to resolve references from other
2349 dynamically linked libraries. In non-global mode, the linked
2350 library is essentially invisible and can only be accessed via
2351 `dynamic-func', etc. The default is now to link in global mode.
2352 Previously, the default has been non-global mode.
2353
2354 The `#:global' keyword is only effective on platforms that support
2355 the dlopen family of functions.
2356
ad226f25 2357** New function `provided?'
b7e13f65
JB
2358
2359 - Function: provided? FEATURE
2360 Return true iff FEATURE is supported by this installation of
2361 Guile. FEATURE must be a symbol naming a feature; the global
2362 variable `*features*' is a list of available features.
2363
ad226f25
JB
2364** Changes to the module (ice-9 expect):
2365
2366*** The expect-strings macro now matches `$' in a regular expression
2367 only at a line-break or end-of-file by default. Previously it would
ab711359
JB
2368 match the end of the string accumulated so far. The old behaviour
2369 can be obtained by setting the variable `expect-strings-exec-flags'
2370 to 0.
ad226f25
JB
2371
2372*** The expect-strings macro now uses a variable `expect-strings-exec-flags'
2373 for the regexp-exec flags. If `regexp/noteol' is included, then `$'
2374 in a regular expression will still match before a line-break or
2375 end-of-file. The default is `regexp/noteol'.
2376
6c0201ad 2377*** The expect-strings macro now uses a variable
ad226f25
JB
2378 `expect-strings-compile-flags' for the flags to be supplied to
2379 `make-regexp'. The default is `regexp/newline', which was previously
2380 hard-coded.
2381
2382*** The expect macro now supplies two arguments to a match procedure:
ab711359
JB
2383 the current accumulated string and a flag to indicate whether
2384 end-of-file has been reached. Previously only the string was supplied.
2385 If end-of-file is reached, the match procedure will be called an
2386 additional time with the same accumulated string as the previous call
2387 but with the flag set.
ad226f25 2388
b7e13f65
JB
2389** New module (ice-9 format), implementing the Common Lisp `format' function.
2390
2391This code, and the documentation for it that appears here, was
2392borrowed from SLIB, with minor adaptations for Guile.
2393
2394 - Function: format DESTINATION FORMAT-STRING . ARGUMENTS
2395 An almost complete implementation of Common LISP format description
2396 according to the CL reference book `Common LISP' from Guy L.
2397 Steele, Digital Press. Backward compatible to most of the
2398 available Scheme format implementations.
2399
2400 Returns `#t', `#f' or a string; has side effect of printing
2401 according to FORMAT-STRING. If DESTINATION is `#t', the output is
2402 to the current output port and `#t' is returned. If DESTINATION
2403 is `#f', a formatted string is returned as the result of the call.
2404 NEW: If DESTINATION is a string, DESTINATION is regarded as the
2405 format string; FORMAT-STRING is then the first argument and the
2406 output is returned as a string. If DESTINATION is a number, the
2407 output is to the current error port if available by the
2408 implementation. Otherwise DESTINATION must be an output port and
2409 `#t' is returned.
2410
2411 FORMAT-STRING must be a string. In case of a formatting error
2412 format returns `#f' and prints a message on the current output or
2413 error port. Characters are output as if the string were output by
2414 the `display' function with the exception of those prefixed by a
2415 tilde (~). For a detailed description of the FORMAT-STRING syntax
2416 please consult a Common LISP format reference manual. For a test
2417 suite to verify this format implementation load `formatst.scm'.
2418 Please send bug reports to `lutzeb@cs.tu-berlin.de'.
2419
2420 Note: `format' is not reentrant, i.e. only one `format'-call may
2421 be executed at a time.
2422
2423
2424*** Format Specification (Format version 3.0)
2425
2426 Please consult a Common LISP format reference manual for a detailed
2427description of the format string syntax. For a demonstration of the
2428implemented directives see `formatst.scm'.
2429
2430 This implementation supports directive parameters and modifiers (`:'
2431and `@' characters). Multiple parameters must be separated by a comma
2432(`,'). Parameters can be numerical parameters (positive or negative),
2433character parameters (prefixed by a quote character (`''), variable
2434parameters (`v'), number of rest arguments parameter (`#'), empty and
2435default parameters. Directive characters are case independent. The
2436general form of a directive is:
2437
2438DIRECTIVE ::= ~{DIRECTIVE-PARAMETER,}[:][@]DIRECTIVE-CHARACTER
2439
2440DIRECTIVE-PARAMETER ::= [ [-|+]{0-9}+ | 'CHARACTER | v | # ]
2441
2442*** Implemented CL Format Control Directives
2443
2444 Documentation syntax: Uppercase characters represent the
2445corresponding control directive characters. Lowercase characters
2446represent control directive parameter descriptions.
2447
2448`~A'
2449 Any (print as `display' does).
2450 `~@A'
2451 left pad.
2452
2453 `~MINCOL,COLINC,MINPAD,PADCHARA'
2454 full padding.
2455
2456`~S'
2457 S-expression (print as `write' does).
2458 `~@S'
2459 left pad.
2460
2461 `~MINCOL,COLINC,MINPAD,PADCHARS'
2462 full padding.
2463
2464`~D'
2465 Decimal.
2466 `~@D'
2467 print number sign always.
2468
2469 `~:D'
2470 print comma separated.
2471
2472 `~MINCOL,PADCHAR,COMMACHARD'
2473 padding.
2474
2475`~X'
2476 Hexadecimal.
2477 `~@X'
2478 print number sign always.
2479
2480 `~:X'
2481 print comma separated.
2482
2483 `~MINCOL,PADCHAR,COMMACHARX'
2484 padding.
2485
2486`~O'
2487 Octal.
2488 `~@O'
2489 print number sign always.
2490
2491 `~:O'
2492 print comma separated.
2493
2494 `~MINCOL,PADCHAR,COMMACHARO'
2495 padding.
2496
2497`~B'
2498 Binary.
2499 `~@B'
2500 print number sign always.
2501
2502 `~:B'
2503 print comma separated.
2504
2505 `~MINCOL,PADCHAR,COMMACHARB'
2506 padding.
2507
2508`~NR'
2509 Radix N.
2510 `~N,MINCOL,PADCHAR,COMMACHARR'
2511 padding.
2512
2513`~@R'
2514 print a number as a Roman numeral.
2515
2516`~:@R'
2517 print a number as an "old fashioned" Roman numeral.
2518
2519`~:R'
2520 print a number as an ordinal English number.
2521
2522`~:@R'
2523 print a number as a cardinal English number.
2524
2525`~P'
2526 Plural.
2527 `~@P'
2528 prints `y' and `ies'.
2529
2530 `~:P'
2531 as `~P but jumps 1 argument backward.'
2532
2533 `~:@P'
2534 as `~@P but jumps 1 argument backward.'
2535
2536`~C'
2537 Character.
2538 `~@C'
2539 prints a character as the reader can understand it (i.e. `#\'
2540 prefixing).
2541
2542 `~:C'
2543 prints a character as emacs does (eg. `^C' for ASCII 03).
2544
2545`~F'
2546 Fixed-format floating-point (prints a flonum like MMM.NNN).
2547 `~WIDTH,DIGITS,SCALE,OVERFLOWCHAR,PADCHARF'
2548 `~@F'
2549 If the number is positive a plus sign is printed.
2550
2551`~E'
2552 Exponential floating-point (prints a flonum like MMM.NNN`E'EE).
2553 `~WIDTH,DIGITS,EXPONENTDIGITS,SCALE,OVERFLOWCHAR,PADCHAR,EXPONENTCHARE'
2554 `~@E'
2555 If the number is positive a plus sign is printed.
2556
2557`~G'
2558 General floating-point (prints a flonum either fixed or
2559 exponential).
2560 `~WIDTH,DIGITS,EXPONENTDIGITS,SCALE,OVERFLOWCHAR,PADCHAR,EXPONENTCHARG'
2561 `~@G'
2562 If the number is positive a plus sign is printed.
2563
2564`~$'
2565 Dollars floating-point (prints a flonum in fixed with signs
2566 separated).
2567 `~DIGITS,SCALE,WIDTH,PADCHAR$'
2568 `~@$'
2569 If the number is positive a plus sign is printed.
2570
2571 `~:@$'
2572 A sign is always printed and appears before the padding.
2573
2574 `~:$'
2575 The sign appears before the padding.
2576
2577`~%'
2578 Newline.
2579 `~N%'
2580 print N newlines.
2581
2582`~&'
2583 print newline if not at the beginning of the output line.
2584 `~N&'
2585 prints `~&' and then N-1 newlines.
2586
2587`~|'
2588 Page Separator.
2589 `~N|'
2590 print N page separators.
2591
2592`~~'
2593 Tilde.
2594 `~N~'
2595 print N tildes.
2596
2597`~'<newline>
2598 Continuation Line.
2599 `~:'<newline>
2600 newline is ignored, white space left.
2601
2602 `~@'<newline>
2603 newline is left, white space ignored.
2604
2605`~T'
2606 Tabulation.
2607 `~@T'
2608 relative tabulation.
2609
2610 `~COLNUM,COLINCT'
2611 full tabulation.
2612
2613`~?'
2614 Indirection (expects indirect arguments as a list).
2615 `~@?'
2616 extracts indirect arguments from format arguments.
2617
2618`~(STR~)'
2619 Case conversion (converts by `string-downcase').
2620 `~:(STR~)'
2621 converts by `string-capitalize'.
2622
2623 `~@(STR~)'
2624 converts by `string-capitalize-first'.
2625
2626 `~:@(STR~)'
2627 converts by `string-upcase'.
2628
2629`~*'
2630 Argument Jumping (jumps 1 argument forward).
2631 `~N*'
2632 jumps N arguments forward.
2633
2634 `~:*'
2635 jumps 1 argument backward.
2636
2637 `~N:*'
2638 jumps N arguments backward.
2639
2640 `~@*'
2641 jumps to the 0th argument.
2642
2643 `~N@*'
2644 jumps to the Nth argument (beginning from 0)
2645
2646`~[STR0~;STR1~;...~;STRN~]'
2647 Conditional Expression (numerical clause conditional).
2648 `~N['
2649 take argument from N.
2650
2651 `~@['
2652 true test conditional.
2653
2654 `~:['
2655 if-else-then conditional.
2656
2657 `~;'
2658 clause separator.
2659
2660 `~:;'
2661 default clause follows.
2662
2663`~{STR~}'
2664 Iteration (args come from the next argument (a list)).
2665 `~N{'
2666 at most N iterations.
2667
2668 `~:{'
2669 args from next arg (a list of lists).
2670
2671 `~@{'
2672 args from the rest of arguments.
2673
2674 `~:@{'
2675 args from the rest args (lists).
2676
2677`~^'
2678 Up and out.
2679 `~N^'
2680 aborts if N = 0
2681
2682 `~N,M^'
2683 aborts if N = M
2684
2685 `~N,M,K^'
2686 aborts if N <= M <= K
2687
2688*** Not Implemented CL Format Control Directives
2689
2690`~:A'
2691 print `#f' as an empty list (see below).
2692
2693`~:S'
2694 print `#f' as an empty list (see below).
2695
2696`~<~>'
2697 Justification.
2698
2699`~:^'
2700 (sorry I don't understand its semantics completely)
2701
2702*** Extended, Replaced and Additional Control Directives
2703
2704`~MINCOL,PADCHAR,COMMACHAR,COMMAWIDTHD'
2705`~MINCOL,PADCHAR,COMMACHAR,COMMAWIDTHX'
2706`~MINCOL,PADCHAR,COMMACHAR,COMMAWIDTHO'
2707`~MINCOL,PADCHAR,COMMACHAR,COMMAWIDTHB'
2708`~N,MINCOL,PADCHAR,COMMACHAR,COMMAWIDTHR'
2709 COMMAWIDTH is the number of characters between two comma
2710 characters.
2711
2712`~I'
2713 print a R4RS complex number as `~F~@Fi' with passed parameters for
2714 `~F'.
2715
2716`~Y'
2717 Pretty print formatting of an argument for scheme code lists.
2718
2719`~K'
2720 Same as `~?.'
2721
2722`~!'
2723 Flushes the output if format DESTINATION is a port.
2724
2725`~_'
2726 Print a `#\space' character
2727 `~N_'
2728 print N `#\space' characters.
2729
2730`~/'
2731 Print a `#\tab' character
2732 `~N/'
2733 print N `#\tab' characters.
2734
2735`~NC'
2736 Takes N as an integer representation for a character. No arguments
2737 are consumed. N is converted to a character by `integer->char'. N
2738 must be a positive decimal number.
2739
2740`~:S'
2741 Print out readproof. Prints out internal objects represented as
2742 `#<...>' as strings `"#<...>"' so that the format output can always
2743 be processed by `read'.
2744
2745`~:A'
2746 Print out readproof. Prints out internal objects represented as
2747 `#<...>' as strings `"#<...>"' so that the format output can always
2748 be processed by `read'.
2749
2750`~Q'
2751 Prints information and a copyright notice on the format
2752 implementation.
2753 `~:Q'
2754 prints format version.
2755
2756`~F, ~E, ~G, ~$'
2757 may also print number strings, i.e. passing a number as a string
2758 and format it accordingly.
2759
2760*** Configuration Variables
2761
2762 The format module exports some configuration variables to suit the
2763systems and users needs. There should be no modification necessary for
2764the configuration that comes with Guile. Format detects automatically
2765if the running scheme system implements floating point numbers and
2766complex numbers.
2767
2768format:symbol-case-conv
2769 Symbols are converted by `symbol->string' so the case type of the
2770 printed symbols is implementation dependent.
2771 `format:symbol-case-conv' is a one arg closure which is either
2772 `#f' (no conversion), `string-upcase', `string-downcase' or
2773 `string-capitalize'. (default `#f')
2774
2775format:iobj-case-conv
2776 As FORMAT:SYMBOL-CASE-CONV but applies for the representation of
2777 implementation internal objects. (default `#f')
2778
2779format:expch
2780 The character prefixing the exponent value in `~E' printing.
2781 (default `#\E')
2782
2783*** Compatibility With Other Format Implementations
2784
2785SLIB format 2.x:
2786 See `format.doc'.
2787
2788SLIB format 1.4:
2789 Downward compatible except for padding support and `~A', `~S',
2790 `~P', `~X' uppercase printing. SLIB format 1.4 uses C-style
2791 `printf' padding support which is completely replaced by the CL
2792 `format' padding style.
2793
2794MIT C-Scheme 7.1:
2795 Downward compatible except for `~', which is not documented
2796 (ignores all characters inside the format string up to a newline
2797 character). (7.1 implements `~a', `~s', ~NEWLINE, `~~', `~%',
2798 numerical and variable parameters and `:/@' modifiers in the CL
2799 sense).
2800
2801Elk 1.5/2.0:
2802 Downward compatible except for `~A' and `~S' which print in
2803 uppercase. (Elk implements `~a', `~s', `~~', and `~%' (no
2804 directive parameters or modifiers)).
2805
2806Scheme->C 01nov91:
2807 Downward compatible except for an optional destination parameter:
2808 S2C accepts a format call without a destination which returns a
2809 formatted string. This is equivalent to a #f destination in S2C.
2810 (S2C implements `~a', `~s', `~c', `~%', and `~~' (no directive
2811 parameters or modifiers)).
2812
2813
e7d37b0a 2814** Changes to string-handling functions.
b7e13f65 2815
e7d37b0a 2816These functions were added to support the (ice-9 format) module, above.
b7e13f65 2817
e7d37b0a
JB
2818*** New function: string-upcase STRING
2819*** New function: string-downcase STRING
b7e13f65 2820
e7d37b0a
JB
2821These are non-destructive versions of the existing string-upcase! and
2822string-downcase! functions.
b7e13f65 2823
e7d37b0a
JB
2824*** New function: string-capitalize! STRING
2825*** New function: string-capitalize STRING
2826
2827These functions convert the first letter of each word in the string to
2828upper case. Thus:
2829
2830 (string-capitalize "howdy there")
2831 => "Howdy There"
2832
2833As with the other functions, string-capitalize! modifies the string in
2834place, while string-capitalize returns a modified copy of its argument.
2835
2836*** New function: string-ci->symbol STRING
2837
2838Return a symbol whose name is STRING, but having the same case as if
2839the symbol had be read by `read'.
2840
2841Guile can be configured to be sensitive or insensitive to case
2842differences in Scheme identifiers. If Guile is case-insensitive, all
2843symbols are converted to lower case on input. The `string-ci->symbol'
2844function returns a symbol whose name in STRING, transformed as Guile
2845would if STRING were input.
2846
2847*** New function: substring-move! STRING1 START END STRING2 START
2848
2849Copy the substring of STRING1 from START (inclusive) to END
2850(exclusive) to STRING2 at START. STRING1 and STRING2 may be the same
2851string, and the source and destination areas may overlap; in all
2852cases, the function behaves as if all the characters were copied
2853simultanously.
2854
6c0201ad 2855*** Extended functions: substring-move-left! substring-move-right!
e7d37b0a
JB
2856
2857These functions now correctly copy arbitrarily overlapping substrings;
2858they are both synonyms for substring-move!.
b7e13f65 2859
b7e13f65 2860
deaceb4e
JB
2861** New module (ice-9 getopt-long), with the function `getopt-long'.
2862
2863getopt-long is a function for parsing command-line arguments in a
2864manner consistent with other GNU programs.
2865
2866(getopt-long ARGS GRAMMAR)
2867Parse the arguments ARGS according to the argument list grammar GRAMMAR.
2868
2869ARGS should be a list of strings. Its first element should be the
2870name of the program; subsequent elements should be the arguments
2871that were passed to the program on the command line. The
2872`program-arguments' procedure returns a list of this form.
2873
2874GRAMMAR is a list of the form:
2875((OPTION (PROPERTY VALUE) ...) ...)
2876
2877Each OPTION should be a symbol. `getopt-long' will accept a
2878command-line option named `--OPTION'.
2879Each option can have the following (PROPERTY VALUE) pairs:
2880
2881 (single-char CHAR) --- Accept `-CHAR' as a single-character
2882 equivalent to `--OPTION'. This is how to specify traditional
2883 Unix-style flags.
2884 (required? BOOL) --- If BOOL is true, the option is required.
2885 getopt-long will raise an error if it is not found in ARGS.
2886 (value BOOL) --- If BOOL is #t, the option accepts a value; if
2887 it is #f, it does not; and if it is the symbol
2888 `optional', the option may appear in ARGS with or
6c0201ad 2889 without a value.
deaceb4e
JB
2890 (predicate FUNC) --- If the option accepts a value (i.e. you
2891 specified `(value #t)' for this option), then getopt
2892 will apply FUNC to the value, and throw an exception
2893 if it returns #f. FUNC should be a procedure which
2894 accepts a string and returns a boolean value; you may
2895 need to use quasiquotes to get it into GRAMMAR.
2896
2897The (PROPERTY VALUE) pairs may occur in any order, but each
2898property may occur only once. By default, options do not have
2899single-character equivalents, are not required, and do not take
2900values.
2901
2902In ARGS, single-character options may be combined, in the usual
2903Unix fashion: ("-x" "-y") is equivalent to ("-xy"). If an option
2904accepts values, then it must be the last option in the
2905combination; the value is the next argument. So, for example, using
2906the following grammar:
2907 ((apples (single-char #\a))
2908 (blimps (single-char #\b) (value #t))
2909 (catalexis (single-char #\c) (value #t)))
2910the following argument lists would be acceptable:
2911 ("-a" "-b" "bang" "-c" "couth") ("bang" and "couth" are the values
2912 for "blimps" and "catalexis")
2913 ("-ab" "bang" "-c" "couth") (same)
2914 ("-ac" "couth" "-b" "bang") (same)
2915 ("-abc" "couth" "bang") (an error, since `-b' is not the
2916 last option in its combination)
2917
2918If an option's value is optional, then `getopt-long' decides
2919whether it has a value by looking at what follows it in ARGS. If
2920the next element is a string, and it does not appear to be an
2921option itself, then that string is the option's value.
2922
2923The value of a long option can appear as the next element in ARGS,
2924or it can follow the option name, separated by an `=' character.
2925Thus, using the same grammar as above, the following argument lists
2926are equivalent:
2927 ("--apples" "Braeburn" "--blimps" "Goodyear")
2928 ("--apples=Braeburn" "--blimps" "Goodyear")
2929 ("--blimps" "Goodyear" "--apples=Braeburn")
2930
2931If the option "--" appears in ARGS, argument parsing stops there;
2932subsequent arguments are returned as ordinary arguments, even if
2933they resemble options. So, in the argument list:
2934 ("--apples" "Granny Smith" "--" "--blimp" "Goodyear")
2935`getopt-long' will recognize the `apples' option as having the
2936value "Granny Smith", but it will not recognize the `blimp'
2937option; it will return the strings "--blimp" and "Goodyear" as
2938ordinary argument strings.
2939
2940The `getopt-long' function returns the parsed argument list as an
2941assocation list, mapping option names --- the symbols from GRAMMAR
2942--- onto their values, or #t if the option does not accept a value.
2943Unused options do not appear in the alist.
2944
2945All arguments that are not the value of any option are returned
2946as a list, associated with the empty list.
2947
2948`getopt-long' throws an exception if:
2949- it finds an unrecognized option in ARGS
2950- a required option is omitted
2951- an option that requires an argument doesn't get one
2952- an option that doesn't accept an argument does get one (this can
2953 only happen using the long option `--opt=value' syntax)
2954- an option predicate fails
2955
2956So, for example:
2957
2958(define grammar
2959 `((lockfile-dir (required? #t)
2960 (value #t)
2961 (single-char #\k)
2962 (predicate ,file-is-directory?))
2963 (verbose (required? #f)
2964 (single-char #\v)
2965 (value #f))
2966 (x-includes (single-char #\x))
6c0201ad 2967 (rnet-server (single-char #\y)
deaceb4e
JB
2968 (predicate ,string?))))
2969
6c0201ad 2970(getopt-long '("my-prog" "-vk" "/tmp" "foo1" "--x-includes=/usr/include"
deaceb4e
JB
2971 "--rnet-server=lamprod" "--" "-fred" "foo2" "foo3")
2972 grammar)
2973=> ((() "foo1" "-fred" "foo2" "foo3")
2974 (rnet-server . "lamprod")
2975 (x-includes . "/usr/include")
2976 (lockfile-dir . "/tmp")
2977 (verbose . #t))
2978
2979** The (ice-9 getopt-gnu-style) module is obsolete; use (ice-9 getopt-long).
2980
2981It will be removed in a few releases.
2982
08394899
MS
2983** New syntax: lambda*
2984** New syntax: define*
6c0201ad 2985** New syntax: define*-public
08394899
MS
2986** New syntax: defmacro*
2987** New syntax: defmacro*-public
6c0201ad 2988Guile now supports optional arguments.
08394899
MS
2989
2990`lambda*', `define*', `define*-public', `defmacro*' and
2991`defmacro*-public' are identical to the non-* versions except that
2992they use an extended type of parameter list that has the following BNF
2993syntax (parentheses are literal, square brackets indicate grouping,
2994and `*', `+' and `?' have the usual meaning):
2995
2996 ext-param-list ::= ( [identifier]* [#&optional [ext-var-decl]+]?
6c0201ad 2997 [#&key [ext-var-decl]+ [#&allow-other-keys]?]?
08394899
MS
2998 [[#&rest identifier]|[. identifier]]? ) | [identifier]
2999
6c0201ad 3000 ext-var-decl ::= identifier | ( identifier expression )
08394899
MS
3001
3002The semantics are best illustrated with the following documentation
3003and examples for `lambda*':
3004
3005 lambda* args . body
3006 lambda extended for optional and keyword arguments
6c0201ad 3007
08394899
MS
3008 lambda* creates a procedure that takes optional arguments. These
3009 are specified by putting them inside brackets at the end of the
3010 paramater list, but before any dotted rest argument. For example,
3011 (lambda* (a b #&optional c d . e) '())
3012 creates a procedure with fixed arguments a and b, optional arguments c
3013 and d, and rest argument e. If the optional arguments are omitted
3014 in a call, the variables for them are unbound in the procedure. This
3015 can be checked with the bound? macro.
3016
3017 lambda* can also take keyword arguments. For example, a procedure
3018 defined like this:
3019 (lambda* (#&key xyzzy larch) '())
3020 can be called with any of the argument lists (#:xyzzy 11)
3021 (#:larch 13) (#:larch 42 #:xyzzy 19) (). Whichever arguments
3022 are given as keywords are bound to values.
3023
3024 Optional and keyword arguments can also be given default values
3025 which they take on when they are not present in a call, by giving a
3026 two-item list in place of an optional argument, for example in:
6c0201ad 3027 (lambda* (foo #&optional (bar 42) #&key (baz 73)) (list foo bar baz))
08394899
MS
3028 foo is a fixed argument, bar is an optional argument with default
3029 value 42, and baz is a keyword argument with default value 73.
3030 Default value expressions are not evaluated unless they are needed
6c0201ad 3031 and until the procedure is called.
08394899
MS
3032
3033 lambda* now supports two more special parameter list keywords.
3034
3035 lambda*-defined procedures now throw an error by default if a
3036 keyword other than one of those specified is found in the actual
3037 passed arguments. However, specifying #&allow-other-keys
3038 immediately after the kyword argument declarations restores the
3039 previous behavior of ignoring unknown keywords. lambda* also now
3040 guarantees that if the same keyword is passed more than once, the
3041 last one passed is the one that takes effect. For example,
3042 ((lambda* (#&key (heads 0) (tails 0)) (display (list heads tails)))
3043 #:heads 37 #:tails 42 #:heads 99)
3044 would result in (99 47) being displayed.
3045
3046 #&rest is also now provided as a synonym for the dotted syntax rest
3047 argument. The argument lists (a . b) and (a #&rest b) are equivalent in
3048 all respects to lambda*. This is provided for more similarity to DSSSL,
3049 MIT-Scheme and Kawa among others, as well as for refugees from other
3050 Lisp dialects.
3051
3052Further documentation may be found in the optargs.scm file itself.
3053
3054The optional argument module also exports the macros `let-optional',
3055`let-optional*', `let-keywords', `let-keywords*' and `bound?'. These
3056are not documented here because they may be removed in the future, but
3057full documentation is still available in optargs.scm.
3058
2e132553
JB
3059** New syntax: and-let*
3060Guile now supports the `and-let*' form, described in the draft SRFI-2.
3061
3062Syntax: (land* (<clause> ...) <body> ...)
3063Each <clause> should have one of the following forms:
3064 (<variable> <expression>)
3065 (<expression>)
3066 <bound-variable>
3067Each <variable> or <bound-variable> should be an identifier. Each
3068<expression> should be a valid expression. The <body> should be a
3069possibly empty sequence of expressions, like the <body> of a
3070lambda form.
3071
3072Semantics: A LAND* expression is evaluated by evaluating the
3073<expression> or <bound-variable> of each of the <clause>s from
3074left to right. The value of the first <expression> or
3075<bound-variable> that evaluates to a false value is returned; the
3076remaining <expression>s and <bound-variable>s are not evaluated.
3077The <body> forms are evaluated iff all the <expression>s and
3078<bound-variable>s evaluate to true values.
3079
3080The <expression>s and the <body> are evaluated in an environment
3081binding each <variable> of the preceding (<variable> <expression>)
3082clauses to the value of the <expression>. Later bindings
3083shadow earlier bindings.
3084
3085Guile's and-let* macro was contributed by Michael Livshin.
3086
36d3d540
MD
3087** New sorting functions
3088
3089*** New function: sorted? SEQUENCE LESS?
ed8c8636
MD
3090Returns `#t' when the sequence argument is in non-decreasing order
3091according to LESS? (that is, there is no adjacent pair `... x y
3092...' for which `(less? y x)').
3093
3094Returns `#f' when the sequence contains at least one out-of-order
3095pair. It is an error if the sequence is neither a list nor a
3096vector.
3097
36d3d540 3098*** New function: merge LIST1 LIST2 LESS?
ed8c8636
MD
3099LIST1 and LIST2 are sorted lists.
3100Returns the sorted list of all elements in LIST1 and LIST2.
3101
3102Assume that the elements a and b1 in LIST1 and b2 in LIST2 are "equal"
3103in the sense that (LESS? x y) --> #f for x, y in {a, b1, b2},
3104and that a < b1 in LIST1. Then a < b1 < b2 in the result.
3105(Here "<" should read "comes before".)
3106
36d3d540 3107*** New procedure: merge! LIST1 LIST2 LESS?
ed8c8636
MD
3108Merges two lists, re-using the pairs of LIST1 and LIST2 to build
3109the result. If the code is compiled, and LESS? constructs no new
3110pairs, no pairs at all will be allocated. The first pair of the
3111result will be either the first pair of LIST1 or the first pair of
3112LIST2.
3113
36d3d540 3114*** New function: sort SEQUENCE LESS?
ed8c8636
MD
3115Accepts either a list or a vector, and returns a new sequence
3116which is sorted. The new sequence is the same type as the input.
3117Always `(sorted? (sort sequence less?) less?)'. The original
3118sequence is not altered in any way. The new sequence shares its
3119elements with the old one; no elements are copied.
3120
36d3d540 3121*** New procedure: sort! SEQUENCE LESS
ed8c8636
MD
3122Returns its sorted result in the original boxes. No new storage is
3123allocated at all. Proper usage: (set! slist (sort! slist <))
3124
36d3d540 3125*** New function: stable-sort SEQUENCE LESS?
ed8c8636
MD
3126Similar to `sort' but stable. That is, if "equal" elements are
3127ordered a < b in the original sequence, they will have the same order
3128in the result.
3129
36d3d540 3130*** New function: stable-sort! SEQUENCE LESS?
ed8c8636
MD
3131Similar to `sort!' but stable.
3132Uses temporary storage when sorting vectors.
3133
36d3d540 3134*** New functions: sort-list, sort-list!
ed8c8636
MD
3135Added for compatibility with scsh.
3136
36d3d540
MD
3137** New built-in random number support
3138
3139*** New function: random N [STATE]
3e8370c3
MD
3140Accepts a positive integer or real N and returns a number of the
3141same type between zero (inclusive) and N (exclusive). The values
3142returned have a uniform distribution.
3143
3144The optional argument STATE must be of the type produced by
416075f1
MD
3145`copy-random-state' or `seed->random-state'. It defaults to the value
3146of the variable `*random-state*'. This object is used to maintain the
3147state of the pseudo-random-number generator and is altered as a side
3148effect of the `random' operation.
3e8370c3 3149
36d3d540 3150*** New variable: *random-state*
3e8370c3
MD
3151Holds a data structure that encodes the internal state of the
3152random-number generator that `random' uses by default. The nature
3153of this data structure is implementation-dependent. It may be
3154printed out and successfully read back in, but may or may not
3155function correctly as a random-number state object in another
3156implementation.
3157
36d3d540 3158*** New function: copy-random-state [STATE]
3e8370c3
MD
3159Returns a new object of type suitable for use as the value of the
3160variable `*random-state*' and as a second argument to `random'.
3161If argument STATE is given, a copy of it is returned. Otherwise a
3162copy of `*random-state*' is returned.
416075f1 3163
36d3d540 3164*** New function: seed->random-state SEED
416075f1
MD
3165Returns a new object of type suitable for use as the value of the
3166variable `*random-state*' and as a second argument to `random'.
3167SEED is a string or a number. A new state is generated and
3168initialized using SEED.
3e8370c3 3169
36d3d540 3170*** New function: random:uniform [STATE]
3e8370c3
MD
3171Returns an uniformly distributed inexact real random number in the
3172range between 0 and 1.
3173
36d3d540 3174*** New procedure: random:solid-sphere! VECT [STATE]
3e8370c3
MD
3175Fills VECT with inexact real random numbers the sum of whose
3176squares is less than 1.0. Thinking of VECT as coordinates in
3177space of dimension N = `(vector-length VECT)', the coordinates are
3178uniformly distributed within the unit N-shere. The sum of the
3179squares of the numbers is returned. VECT can be either a vector
3180or a uniform vector of doubles.
3181
36d3d540 3182*** New procedure: random:hollow-sphere! VECT [STATE]
3e8370c3
MD
3183Fills VECT with inexact real random numbers the sum of whose squares
3184is equal to 1.0. Thinking of VECT as coordinates in space of
3185dimension n = `(vector-length VECT)', the coordinates are uniformly
3186distributed over the surface of the unit n-shere. VECT can be either
3187a vector or a uniform vector of doubles.
3188
36d3d540 3189*** New function: random:normal [STATE]
3e8370c3
MD
3190Returns an inexact real in a normal distribution with mean 0 and
3191standard deviation 1. For a normal distribution with mean M and
3192standard deviation D use `(+ M (* D (random:normal)))'.
3193
36d3d540 3194*** New procedure: random:normal-vector! VECT [STATE]
3e8370c3
MD
3195Fills VECT with inexact real random numbers which are independent and
3196standard normally distributed (i.e., with mean 0 and variance 1).
3197VECT can be either a vector or a uniform vector of doubles.
3198
36d3d540 3199*** New function: random:exp STATE
3e8370c3
MD
3200Returns an inexact real in an exponential distribution with mean 1.
3201For an exponential distribution with mean U use (* U (random:exp)).
3202
69c6acbb
JB
3203** The range of logand, logior, logxor, logtest, and logbit? have changed.
3204
3205These functions now operate on numbers in the range of a C unsigned
3206long.
3207
3208These functions used to operate on numbers in the range of a C signed
3209long; however, this seems inappropriate, because Guile integers don't
3210overflow.
3211
ba4ee0d6
MD
3212** New function: make-guardian
3213This is an implementation of guardians as described in
3214R. Kent Dybvig, Carl Bruggeman, and David Eby (1993) "Guardians in a
3215Generation-Based Garbage Collector" ACM SIGPLAN Conference on
3216Programming Language Design and Implementation, June 1993
3217ftp://ftp.cs.indiana.edu/pub/scheme-repository/doc/pubs/guardians.ps.gz
3218
88ceea5c
MD
3219** New functions: delq1!, delv1!, delete1!
3220These procedures behave similar to delq! and friends but delete only
3221one object if at all.
3222
55254a6a
MD
3223** New function: unread-string STRING PORT
3224Unread STRING to PORT, that is, push it back onto the port so that
3225next read operation will work on the pushed back characters.
3226
3227** unread-char can now be called multiple times
3228If unread-char is called multiple times, the unread characters will be
3229read again in last-in first-out order.
3230
9e97c52d
GH
3231** the procedures uniform-array-read! and uniform-array-write! now
3232work on any kind of port, not just ports which are open on a file.
3233
b074884f 3234** Now 'l' in a port mode requests line buffering.
9e97c52d 3235
69bc9ff3
GH
3236** The procedure truncate-file now works on string ports as well
3237as file ports. If the size argument is omitted, the current
1b9c3dae 3238file position is used.
9e97c52d 3239
c94577b4 3240** new procedure: seek PORT/FDES OFFSET WHENCE
9e97c52d
GH
3241The arguments are the same as for the old fseek procedure, but it
3242works on string ports as well as random-access file ports.
3243
3244** the fseek procedure now works on string ports, since it has been
c94577b4 3245redefined using seek.
9e97c52d
GH
3246
3247** the setvbuf procedure now uses a default size if mode is _IOFBF and
3248size is not supplied.
3249
3250** the newline procedure no longer flushes the port if it's not
3251line-buffered: previously it did if it was the current output port.
3252
3253** open-pipe and close-pipe are no longer primitive procedures, but
3254an emulation can be obtained using `(use-modules (ice-9 popen))'.
3255
3256** the freopen procedure has been removed.
3257
3258** new procedure: drain-input PORT
3259Drains PORT's read buffers (including any pushed-back characters)
3260and returns the contents as a single string.
3261
67ad463a 3262** New function: map-in-order PROC LIST1 LIST2 ...
d41b3904
MD
3263Version of `map' which guarantees that the procedure is applied to the
3264lists in serial order.
3265
67ad463a
MD
3266** Renamed `serial-array-copy!' and `serial-array-map!' to
3267`array-copy-in-order!' and `array-map-in-order!'. The old names are
3268now obsolete and will go away in release 1.5.
3269
cf7132b3 3270** New syntax: collect BODY1 ...
d41b3904
MD
3271Version of `begin' which returns a list of the results of the body
3272forms instead of the result of the last body form. In contrast to
cf7132b3 3273`begin', `collect' allows an empty body.
d41b3904 3274
e4eae9b1
MD
3275** New functions: read-history FILENAME, write-history FILENAME
3276Read/write command line history from/to file. Returns #t on success
3277and #f if an error occured.
3278
d21ffe26
JB
3279** `ls' and `lls' in module (ice-9 ls) now handle no arguments.
3280
3281These procedures return a list of definitions available in the specified
3282argument, a relative module reference. In the case of no argument,
3283`(current-module)' is now consulted for definitions to return, instead
3284of simply returning #f, the former behavior.
3285
f8c9d497
JB
3286** The #/ syntax for lists is no longer supported.
3287
3288Earlier versions of Scheme accepted this syntax, but printed a
3289warning.
3290
3291** Guile no longer consults the SCHEME_LOAD_PATH environment variable.
3292
3293Instead, you should set GUILE_LOAD_PATH to tell Guile where to find
3294modules.
3295
3ffc7a36
MD
3296* Changes to the gh_ interface
3297
3298** gh_scm2doubles
3299
3300Now takes a second argument which is the result array. If this
3301pointer is NULL, a new array is malloced (the old behaviour).
3302
3303** gh_chars2byvect, gh_shorts2svect, gh_floats2fvect, gh_scm2chars,
3304 gh_scm2shorts, gh_scm2longs, gh_scm2floats
3305
3306New functions.
3307
3e8370c3
MD
3308* Changes to the scm_ interface
3309
ad91d6c3
MD
3310** Function: scm_make_named_hook (char* name, int n_args)
3311
3312Creates a hook in the same way as make-hook above but also
3313binds a variable named NAME to it.
3314
3315This is the typical way of creating a hook from C code.
3316
ece41168
MD
3317Currently, the variable is created in the "current" module. This
3318might change when we get the new module system.
ad91d6c3 3319
16a5a9a4
MD
3320** The smob interface
3321
3322The interface for creating smobs has changed. For documentation, see
3323data-rep.info (made from guile-core/doc/data-rep.texi).
3324
3325*** Deprecated function: SCM scm_newsmob (scm_smobfuns *)
3326
3327>>> This function will be removed in 1.3.4. <<<
3328
3329It is replaced by:
3330
3331*** Function: SCM scm_make_smob_type (const char *name, scm_sizet size)
3332This function adds a new smob type, named NAME, with instance size
3333SIZE to the system. The return value is a tag that is used in
3334creating instances of the type. If SIZE is 0, then no memory will
3335be allocated when instances of the smob are created, and nothing
3336will be freed by the default free function.
6c0201ad 3337
16a5a9a4
MD
3338*** Function: void scm_set_smob_mark (long tc, SCM (*mark) (SCM))
3339This function sets the smob marking procedure for the smob type
3340specified by the tag TC. TC is the tag returned by
3341`scm_make_smob_type'.
3342
3343*** Function: void scm_set_smob_free (long tc, SCM (*mark) (SCM))
3344This function sets the smob freeing procedure for the smob type
3345specified by the tag TC. TC is the tag returned by
3346`scm_make_smob_type'.
3347
3348*** Function: void scm_set_smob_print (tc, print)
3349
3350 - Function: void scm_set_smob_print (long tc,
3351 scm_sizet (*print) (SCM,
3352 SCM,
3353 scm_print_state *))
3354
3355This function sets the smob printing procedure for the smob type
3356specified by the tag TC. TC is the tag returned by
3357`scm_make_smob_type'.
3358
3359*** Function: void scm_set_smob_equalp (long tc, SCM (*equalp) (SCM, SCM))
3360This function sets the smob equality-testing predicate for the
3361smob type specified by the tag TC. TC is the tag returned by
3362`scm_make_smob_type'.
3363
3364*** Macro: void SCM_NEWSMOB (SCM var, long tc, void *data)
3365Make VALUE contain a smob instance of the type with type code TC and
3366smob data DATA. VALUE must be previously declared as C type `SCM'.
3367
3368*** Macro: fn_returns SCM_RETURN_NEWSMOB (long tc, void *data)
3369This macro expands to a block of code that creates a smob instance
3370of the type with type code TC and smob data DATA, and returns that
3371`SCM' value. It should be the last piece of code in a block.
3372
9e97c52d
GH
3373** The interfaces for using I/O ports and implementing port types
3374(ptobs) have changed significantly. The new interface is based on
3375shared access to buffers and a new set of ptob procedures.
3376
16a5a9a4
MD
3377*** scm_newptob has been removed
3378
3379It is replaced by:
3380
3381*** Function: SCM scm_make_port_type (type_name, fill_buffer, write_flush)
3382
3383- Function: SCM scm_make_port_type (char *type_name,
3384 int (*fill_buffer) (SCM port),
3385 void (*write_flush) (SCM port));
3386
3387Similarly to the new smob interface, there is a set of function
3388setters by which the user can customize the behaviour of his port
544e9093 3389type. See ports.h (scm_set_port_XXX).
16a5a9a4 3390
9e97c52d
GH
3391** scm_strport_to_string: New function: creates a new string from
3392a string port's buffer.
3393
3e8370c3
MD
3394** Plug in interface for random number generators
3395The variable `scm_the_rng' in random.c contains a value and three
3396function pointers which together define the current random number
3397generator being used by the Scheme level interface and the random
3398number library functions.
3399
3400The user is free to replace the default generator with the generator
3401of his own choice.
3402
3403*** Variable: size_t scm_the_rng.rstate_size
3404The size of the random state type used by the current RNG
3405measured in chars.
3406
3407*** Function: unsigned long scm_the_rng.random_bits (scm_rstate *STATE)
3408Given the random STATE, return 32 random bits.
3409
3410*** Function: void scm_the_rng.init_rstate (scm_rstate *STATE, chars *S, int N)
3411Seed random state STATE using string S of length N.
3412
3413*** Function: scm_rstate *scm_the_rng.copy_rstate (scm_rstate *STATE)
3414Given random state STATE, return a malloced copy.
3415
3416** Default RNG
3417The default RNG is the MWC (Multiply With Carry) random number
3418generator described by George Marsaglia at the Department of
3419Statistics and Supercomputer Computations Research Institute, The
3420Florida State University (http://stat.fsu.edu/~geo).
3421
3422It uses 64 bits, has a period of 4578426017172946943 (4.6e18), and
3423passes all tests in the DIEHARD test suite
3424(http://stat.fsu.edu/~geo/diehard.html). The generation of 32 bits
3425costs one multiply and one add on platforms which either supports long
3426longs (gcc does this on most systems) or have 64 bit longs. The cost
3427is four multiply on other systems but this can be optimized by writing
3428scm_i_uniform32 in assembler.
3429
3430These functions are provided through the scm_the_rng interface for use
3431by libguile and the application.
3432
3433*** Function: unsigned long scm_i_uniform32 (scm_i_rstate *STATE)
3434Given the random STATE, return 32 random bits.
3435Don't use this function directly. Instead go through the plugin
3436interface (see "Plug in interface" above).
3437
3438*** Function: void scm_i_init_rstate (scm_i_rstate *STATE, char *SEED, int N)
3439Initialize STATE using SEED of length N.
3440
3441*** Function: scm_i_rstate *scm_i_copy_rstate (scm_i_rstate *STATE)
3442Return a malloc:ed copy of STATE. This function can easily be re-used
3443in the interfaces to other RNGs.
3444
3445** Random number library functions
3446These functions use the current RNG through the scm_the_rng interface.
3447It might be a good idea to use these functions from your C code so
3448that only one random generator is used by all code in your program.
3449
259529f2 3450The default random state is stored in:
3e8370c3
MD
3451
3452*** Variable: SCM scm_var_random_state
3453Contains the vcell of the Scheme variable "*random-state*" which is
3454used as default state by all random number functions in the Scheme
3455level interface.
3456
3457Example:
3458
259529f2 3459 double x = scm_c_uniform01 (SCM_RSTATE (SCM_CDR (scm_var_random_state)));
3e8370c3 3460
259529f2
MD
3461*** Function: scm_rstate *scm_c_default_rstate (void)
3462This is a convenience function which returns the value of
3463scm_var_random_state. An error message is generated if this value
3464isn't a random state.
3465
3466*** Function: scm_rstate *scm_c_make_rstate (char *SEED, int LENGTH)
3467Make a new random state from the string SEED of length LENGTH.
3468
3469It is generally not a good idea to use multiple random states in a
3470program. While subsequent random numbers generated from one random
3471state are guaranteed to be reasonably independent, there is no such
3472guarantee for numbers generated from different random states.
3473
3474*** Macro: unsigned long scm_c_uniform32 (scm_rstate *STATE)
3475Return 32 random bits.
3476
3477*** Function: double scm_c_uniform01 (scm_rstate *STATE)
3e8370c3
MD
3478Return a sample from the uniform(0,1) distribution.
3479
259529f2 3480*** Function: double scm_c_normal01 (scm_rstate *STATE)
3e8370c3
MD
3481Return a sample from the normal(0,1) distribution.
3482
259529f2 3483*** Function: double scm_c_exp1 (scm_rstate *STATE)
3e8370c3
MD
3484Return a sample from the exp(1) distribution.
3485
259529f2
MD
3486*** Function: unsigned long scm_c_random (scm_rstate *STATE, unsigned long M)
3487Return a sample from the discrete uniform(0,M) distribution.
3488
3489*** Function: SCM scm_c_random_bignum (scm_rstate *STATE, SCM M)
3e8370c3 3490Return a sample from the discrete uniform(0,M) distribution.
259529f2 3491M must be a bignum object. The returned value may be an INUM.
3e8370c3 3492
9e97c52d 3493
f3227c7a 3494\f
d23bbf3e 3495Changes in Guile 1.3 (released Monday, October 19, 1998):
c484bf7f
JB
3496
3497* Changes to the distribution
3498
e2d6569c
JB
3499** We renamed the SCHEME_LOAD_PATH environment variable to GUILE_LOAD_PATH.
3500To avoid conflicts, programs should name environment variables after
3501themselves, except when there's a common practice establishing some
3502other convention.
3503
3504For now, Guile supports both GUILE_LOAD_PATH and SCHEME_LOAD_PATH,
3505giving the former precedence, and printing a warning message if the
3506latter is set. Guile 1.4 will not recognize SCHEME_LOAD_PATH at all.
3507
3508** The header files related to multi-byte characters have been removed.
3509They were: libguile/extchrs.h and libguile/mbstrings.h. Any C code
3510which referred to these explicitly will probably need to be rewritten,
3511since the support for the variant string types has been removed; see
3512below.
3513
3514** The header files append.h and sequences.h have been removed. These
3515files implemented non-R4RS operations which would encourage
3516non-portable programming style and less easy-to-read code.
3a97e020 3517
c484bf7f
JB
3518* Changes to the stand-alone interpreter
3519
2e368582 3520** New procedures have been added to implement a "batch mode":
ec4ab4fd 3521
2e368582 3522*** Function: batch-mode?
ec4ab4fd
GH
3523
3524 Returns a boolean indicating whether the interpreter is in batch
3525 mode.
3526
2e368582 3527*** Function: set-batch-mode?! ARG
ec4ab4fd
GH
3528
3529 If ARG is true, switches the interpreter to batch mode. The `#f'
3530 case has not been implemented.
3531
2e368582
JB
3532** Guile now provides full command-line editing, when run interactively.
3533To use this feature, you must have the readline library installed.
3534The Guile build process will notice it, and automatically include
3535support for it.
3536
3537The readline library is available via anonymous FTP from any GNU
3538mirror site; the canonical location is "ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu".
3539
a5d6d578
MD
3540** the-last-stack is now a fluid.
3541
c484bf7f
JB
3542* Changes to the procedure for linking libguile with your programs
3543
71f20534 3544** You can now use the `guile-config' utility to build programs that use Guile.
2e368582 3545
2adfe1c0 3546Guile now includes a command-line utility called `guile-config', which
71f20534
JB
3547can provide information about how to compile and link programs that
3548use Guile.
3549
3550*** `guile-config compile' prints any C compiler flags needed to use Guile.
3551You should include this command's output on the command line you use
3552to compile C or C++ code that #includes the Guile header files. It's
3553usually just a `-I' flag to help the compiler find the Guile headers.
3554
3555
3556*** `guile-config link' prints any linker flags necessary to link with Guile.
8aa5c148 3557
71f20534 3558This command writes to its standard output a list of flags which you
8aa5c148
JB
3559must pass to the linker to link your code against the Guile library.
3560The flags include '-lguile' itself, any other libraries the Guile
3561library depends upon, and any `-L' flags needed to help the linker
3562find those libraries.
2e368582
JB
3563
3564For example, here is a Makefile rule that builds a program named 'foo'
3565from the object files ${FOO_OBJECTS}, and links them against Guile:
3566
3567 foo: ${FOO_OBJECTS}
2adfe1c0 3568 ${CC} ${CFLAGS} ${FOO_OBJECTS} `guile-config link` -o foo
2e368582 3569
e2d6569c
JB
3570Previous Guile releases recommended that you use autoconf to detect
3571which of a predefined set of libraries were present on your system.
2adfe1c0 3572It is more robust to use `guile-config', since it records exactly which
e2d6569c
JB
3573libraries the installed Guile library requires.
3574
2adfe1c0
JB
3575This was originally called `build-guile', but was renamed to
3576`guile-config' before Guile 1.3 was released, to be consistent with
3577the analogous script for the GTK+ GUI toolkit, which is called
3578`gtk-config'.
3579
2e368582 3580
8aa5c148
JB
3581** Use the GUILE_FLAGS macro in your configure.in file to find Guile.
3582
3583If you are using the GNU autoconf package to configure your program,
3584you can use the GUILE_FLAGS autoconf macro to call `guile-config'
3585(described above) and gather the necessary values for use in your
3586Makefiles.
3587
3588The GUILE_FLAGS macro expands to configure script code which runs the
3589`guile-config' script, to find out where Guile's header files and
3590libraries are installed. It sets two variables, marked for
3591substitution, as by AC_SUBST.
3592
3593 GUILE_CFLAGS --- flags to pass to a C or C++ compiler to build
3594 code that uses Guile header files. This is almost always just a
3595 -I flag.
3596
3597 GUILE_LDFLAGS --- flags to pass to the linker to link a
3598 program against Guile. This includes `-lguile' for the Guile
3599 library itself, any libraries that Guile itself requires (like
3600 -lqthreads), and so on. It may also include a -L flag to tell the
3601 compiler where to find the libraries.
3602
3603GUILE_FLAGS is defined in the file guile.m4, in the top-level
3604directory of the Guile distribution. You can copy it into your
3605package's aclocal.m4 file, and then use it in your configure.in file.
3606
3607If you are using the `aclocal' program, distributed with GNU automake,
3608to maintain your aclocal.m4 file, the Guile installation process
3609installs guile.m4 where aclocal will find it. All you need to do is
3610use GUILE_FLAGS in your configure.in file, and then run `aclocal';
3611this will copy the definition of GUILE_FLAGS into your aclocal.m4
3612file.
3613
3614
c484bf7f 3615* Changes to Scheme functions and syntax
7ad3c1e7 3616
02755d59 3617** Multi-byte strings have been removed, as have multi-byte and wide
e2d6569c
JB
3618ports. We felt that these were the wrong approach to
3619internationalization support.
02755d59 3620
2e368582
JB
3621** New function: readline [PROMPT]
3622Read a line from the terminal, and allow the user to edit it,
3623prompting with PROMPT. READLINE provides a large set of Emacs-like
3624editing commands, lets the user recall previously typed lines, and
3625works on almost every kind of terminal, including dumb terminals.
3626
3627READLINE assumes that the cursor is at the beginning of the line when
3628it is invoked. Thus, you can't print a prompt yourself, and then call
3629READLINE; you need to package up your prompt as a string, pass it to
3630the function, and let READLINE print the prompt itself. This is
3631because READLINE needs to know the prompt's screen width.
3632
8cd57bd0
JB
3633For Guile to provide this function, you must have the readline
3634library, version 2.1 or later, installed on your system. Readline is
3635available via anonymous FTP from prep.ai.mit.edu in pub/gnu, or from
3636any GNU mirror site.
2e368582
JB
3637
3638See also ADD-HISTORY function.
3639
3640** New function: add-history STRING
3641Add STRING as the most recent line in the history used by the READLINE
3642command. READLINE does not add lines to the history itself; you must
3643call ADD-HISTORY to make previous input available to the user.
3644
8cd57bd0
JB
3645** The behavior of the read-line function has changed.
3646
3647This function now uses standard C library functions to read the line,
3648for speed. This means that it doesn not respect the value of
3649scm-line-incrementors; it assumes that lines are delimited with
3650#\newline.
3651
3652(Note that this is read-line, the function that reads a line of text
3653from a port, not readline, the function that reads a line from a
3654terminal, providing full editing capabilities.)
3655
1a0106ef
JB
3656** New module (ice-9 getopt-gnu-style): Parse command-line arguments.
3657
3658This module provides some simple argument parsing. It exports one
3659function:
3660
3661Function: getopt-gnu-style ARG-LS
3662 Parse a list of program arguments into an alist of option
3663 descriptions.
3664
3665 Each item in the list of program arguments is examined to see if
3666 it meets the syntax of a GNU long-named option. An argument like
3667 `--MUMBLE' produces an element of the form (MUMBLE . #t) in the
3668 returned alist, where MUMBLE is a keyword object with the same
3669 name as the argument. An argument like `--MUMBLE=FROB' produces
3670 an element of the form (MUMBLE . FROB), where FROB is a string.
3671
3672 As a special case, the returned alist also contains a pair whose
3673 car is the symbol `rest'. The cdr of this pair is a list
3674 containing all the items in the argument list that are not options
3675 of the form mentioned above.
3676
3677 The argument `--' is treated specially: all items in the argument
3678 list appearing after such an argument are not examined, and are
3679 returned in the special `rest' list.
3680
3681 This function does not parse normal single-character switches.
3682 You will need to parse them out of the `rest' list yourself.
3683
8cd57bd0
JB
3684** The read syntax for byte vectors and short vectors has changed.
3685
3686Instead of #bytes(...), write #y(...).
3687
3688Instead of #short(...), write #h(...).
3689
3690This may seem nutty, but, like the other uniform vectors, byte vectors
3691and short vectors want to have the same print and read syntax (and,
3692more basic, want to have read syntax!). Changing the read syntax to
3693use multiple characters after the hash sign breaks with the
3694conventions used in R5RS and the conventions used for the other
3695uniform vectors. It also introduces complexity in the current reader,
3696both on the C and Scheme levels. (The Right solution is probably to
3697change the syntax and prototypes for uniform vectors entirely.)
3698
3699
3700** The new module (ice-9 session) provides useful interactive functions.
3701
3702*** New procedure: (apropos REGEXP OPTION ...)
3703
3704Display a list of top-level variables whose names match REGEXP, and
3705the modules they are imported from. Each OPTION should be one of the
3706following symbols:
3707
3708 value --- Show the value of each matching variable.
3709 shadow --- Show bindings shadowed by subsequently imported modules.
3710 full --- Same as both `shadow' and `value'.
3711
3712For example:
3713
3714 guile> (apropos "trace" 'full)
3715 debug: trace #<procedure trace args>
3716 debug: untrace #<procedure untrace args>
3717 the-scm-module: display-backtrace #<compiled-closure #<primitive-procedure gsubr-apply>>
3718 the-scm-module: before-backtrace-hook ()
3719 the-scm-module: backtrace #<primitive-procedure backtrace>
3720 the-scm-module: after-backtrace-hook ()
3721 the-scm-module: has-shown-backtrace-hint? #f
6c0201ad 3722 guile>
8cd57bd0
JB
3723
3724** There are new functions and syntax for working with macros.
3725
3726Guile implements macros as a special object type. Any variable whose
3727top-level binding is a macro object acts as a macro. The macro object
3728specifies how the expression should be transformed before evaluation.
3729
3730*** Macro objects now print in a reasonable way, resembling procedures.
3731
3732*** New function: (macro? OBJ)
3733True iff OBJ is a macro object.
3734
3735*** New function: (primitive-macro? OBJ)
3736Like (macro? OBJ), but true only if OBJ is one of the Guile primitive
3737macro transformers, implemented in eval.c rather than Scheme code.
3738
dbdd0c16
JB
3739Why do we have this function?
3740- For symmetry with procedure? and primitive-procedure?,
3741- to allow custom print procedures to tell whether a macro is
3742 primitive, and display it differently, and
3743- to allow compilers and user-written evaluators to distinguish
3744 builtin special forms from user-defined ones, which could be
3745 compiled.
3746
8cd57bd0
JB
3747*** New function: (macro-type OBJ)
3748Return a value indicating what kind of macro OBJ is. Possible return
3749values are:
3750
3751 The symbol `syntax' --- a macro created by procedure->syntax.
3752 The symbol `macro' --- a macro created by procedure->macro.
3753 The symbol `macro!' --- a macro created by procedure->memoizing-macro.
6c0201ad 3754 The boolean #f --- if OBJ is not a macro object.
8cd57bd0
JB
3755
3756*** New function: (macro-name MACRO)
3757Return the name of the macro object MACRO's procedure, as returned by
3758procedure-name.
3759
3760*** New function: (macro-transformer MACRO)
3761Return the transformer procedure for MACRO.
3762
3763*** New syntax: (use-syntax MODULE ... TRANSFORMER)
3764
3765Specify a new macro expander to use in the current module. Each
3766MODULE is a module name, with the same meaning as in the `use-modules'
3767form; each named module's exported bindings are added to the current
3768top-level environment. TRANSFORMER is an expression evaluated in the
3769resulting environment which must yield a procedure to use as the
3770module's eval transformer: every expression evaluated in this module
3771is passed to this function, and the result passed to the Guile
6c0201ad 3772interpreter.
8cd57bd0
JB
3773
3774*** macro-eval! is removed. Use local-eval instead.
29521173 3775
8d9dcb3c
MV
3776** Some magic has been added to the printer to better handle user
3777written printing routines (like record printers, closure printers).
3778
3779The problem is that these user written routines must have access to
7fbd77df 3780the current `print-state' to be able to handle fancy things like
8d9dcb3c
MV
3781detection of circular references. These print-states have to be
3782passed to the builtin printing routines (display, write, etc) to
3783properly continue the print chain.
3784
3785We didn't want to change all existing print code so that it
8cd57bd0 3786explicitly passes thru a print state in addition to a port. Instead,
8d9dcb3c
MV
3787we extented the possible values that the builtin printing routines
3788accept as a `port'. In addition to a normal port, they now also take
3789a pair of a normal port and a print-state. Printing will go to the
3790port and the print-state will be used to control the detection of
3791circular references, etc. If the builtin function does not care for a
3792print-state, it is simply ignored.
3793
3794User written callbacks are now called with such a pair as their
3795`port', but because every function now accepts this pair as a PORT
3796argument, you don't have to worry about that. In fact, it is probably
3797safest to not check for these pairs.
3798
3799However, it is sometimes necessary to continue a print chain on a
3800different port, for example to get a intermediate string
3801representation of the printed value, mangle that string somehow, and
3802then to finally print the mangled string. Use the new function
3803
3804 inherit-print-state OLD-PORT NEW-PORT
3805
3806for this. It constructs a new `port' that prints to NEW-PORT but
3807inherits the print-state of OLD-PORT.
3808
ef1ea498
MD
3809** struct-vtable-offset renamed to vtable-offset-user
3810
3811** New constants: vtable-index-layout, vtable-index-vtable, vtable-index-printer
3812
e478dffa
MD
3813** There is now a third optional argument to make-vtable-vtable
3814 (and fourth to make-struct) when constructing new types (vtables).
3815 This argument initializes field vtable-index-printer of the vtable.
ef1ea498 3816
4851dc57
MV
3817** The detection of circular references has been extended to structs.
3818That is, a structure that -- in the process of being printed -- prints
3819itself does not lead to infinite recursion.
3820
3821** There is now some basic support for fluids. Please read
3822"libguile/fluid.h" to find out more. It is accessible from Scheme with
3823the following functions and macros:
3824
9c3fb66f
MV
3825Function: make-fluid
3826
3827 Create a new fluid object. Fluids are not special variables or
3828 some other extension to the semantics of Scheme, but rather
3829 ordinary Scheme objects. You can store them into variables (that
3830 are still lexically scoped, of course) or into any other place you
3831 like. Every fluid has a initial value of `#f'.
04c76b58 3832
9c3fb66f 3833Function: fluid? OBJ
04c76b58 3834
9c3fb66f 3835 Test whether OBJ is a fluid.
04c76b58 3836
9c3fb66f
MV
3837Function: fluid-ref FLUID
3838Function: fluid-set! FLUID VAL
04c76b58
MV
3839
3840 Access/modify the fluid FLUID. Modifications are only visible
3841 within the current dynamic root (that includes threads).
3842
9c3fb66f
MV
3843Function: with-fluids* FLUIDS VALUES THUNK
3844
3845 FLUIDS is a list of fluids and VALUES a corresponding list of
3846 values for these fluids. Before THUNK gets called the values are
6c0201ad 3847 installed in the fluids and the old values of the fluids are
9c3fb66f
MV
3848 saved in the VALUES list. When the flow of control leaves THUNK
3849 or reenters it, the values get swapped again. You might think of
3850 this as a `safe-fluid-excursion'. Note that the VALUES list is
3851 modified by `with-fluids*'.
3852
3853Macro: with-fluids ((FLUID VALUE) ...) FORM ...
3854
3855 The same as `with-fluids*' but with a different syntax. It looks
3856 just like `let', but both FLUID and VALUE are evaluated. Remember,
3857 fluids are not special variables but ordinary objects. FLUID
3858 should evaluate to a fluid.
04c76b58 3859
e2d6569c 3860** Changes to system call interfaces:
64d01d13 3861
e2d6569c 3862*** close-port, close-input-port and close-output-port now return a
64d01d13
GH
3863boolean instead of an `unspecified' object. #t means that the port
3864was successfully closed, while #f means it was already closed. It is
3865also now possible for these procedures to raise an exception if an
3866error occurs (some errors from write can be delayed until close.)
3867
e2d6569c 3868*** the first argument to chmod, fcntl, ftell and fseek can now be a
6afcd3b2
GH
3869file descriptor.
3870
e2d6569c 3871*** the third argument to fcntl is now optional.
6afcd3b2 3872
e2d6569c 3873*** the first argument to chown can now be a file descriptor or a port.
6afcd3b2 3874
e2d6569c 3875*** the argument to stat can now be a port.
6afcd3b2 3876
e2d6569c 3877*** The following new procedures have been added (most use scsh
64d01d13
GH
3878interfaces):
3879
e2d6569c 3880*** procedure: close PORT/FD
ec4ab4fd
GH
3881 Similar to close-port (*note close-port: Closing Ports.), but also
3882 works on file descriptors. A side effect of closing a file
3883 descriptor is that any ports using that file descriptor are moved
3884 to a different file descriptor and have their revealed counts set
3885 to zero.
3886
e2d6569c 3887*** procedure: port->fdes PORT
ec4ab4fd
GH
3888 Returns the integer file descriptor underlying PORT. As a side
3889 effect the revealed count of PORT is incremented.
3890
e2d6569c 3891*** procedure: fdes->ports FDES
ec4ab4fd
GH
3892 Returns a list of existing ports which have FDES as an underlying
3893 file descriptor, without changing their revealed counts.
3894
e2d6569c 3895*** procedure: fdes->inport FDES
ec4ab4fd
GH
3896 Returns an existing input port which has FDES as its underlying
3897 file descriptor, if one exists, and increments its revealed count.
3898 Otherwise, returns a new input port with a revealed count of 1.
3899
e2d6569c 3900*** procedure: fdes->outport FDES
ec4ab4fd
GH
3901 Returns an existing output port which has FDES as its underlying
3902 file descriptor, if one exists, and increments its revealed count.
3903 Otherwise, returns a new output port with a revealed count of 1.
3904
3905 The next group of procedures perform a `dup2' system call, if NEWFD
3906(an integer) is supplied, otherwise a `dup'. The file descriptor to be
3907duplicated can be supplied as an integer or contained in a port. The
64d01d13
GH
3908type of value returned varies depending on which procedure is used.
3909
ec4ab4fd
GH
3910 All procedures also have the side effect when performing `dup2' that
3911any ports using NEWFD are moved to a different file descriptor and have
64d01d13
GH
3912their revealed counts set to zero.
3913
e2d6569c 3914*** procedure: dup->fdes PORT/FD [NEWFD]
ec4ab4fd 3915 Returns an integer file descriptor.
64d01d13 3916
e2d6569c 3917*** procedure: dup->inport PORT/FD [NEWFD]
ec4ab4fd 3918 Returns a new input port using the new file descriptor.
64d01d13 3919
e2d6569c 3920*** procedure: dup->outport PORT/FD [NEWFD]
ec4ab4fd 3921 Returns a new output port using the new file descriptor.
64d01d13 3922
e2d6569c 3923*** procedure: dup PORT/FD [NEWFD]
ec4ab4fd
GH
3924 Returns a new port if PORT/FD is a port, with the same mode as the
3925 supplied port, otherwise returns an integer file descriptor.
64d01d13 3926
e2d6569c 3927*** procedure: dup->port PORT/FD MODE [NEWFD]
ec4ab4fd
GH
3928 Returns a new port using the new file descriptor. MODE supplies a
3929 mode string for the port (*note open-file: File Ports.).
64d01d13 3930
e2d6569c 3931*** procedure: setenv NAME VALUE
ec4ab4fd
GH
3932 Modifies the environment of the current process, which is also the
3933 default environment inherited by child processes.
64d01d13 3934
ec4ab4fd
GH
3935 If VALUE is `#f', then NAME is removed from the environment.
3936 Otherwise, the string NAME=VALUE is added to the environment,
3937 replacing any existing string with name matching NAME.
64d01d13 3938
ec4ab4fd 3939 The return value is unspecified.
956055a9 3940
e2d6569c 3941*** procedure: truncate-file OBJ SIZE
6afcd3b2
GH
3942 Truncates the file referred to by OBJ to at most SIZE bytes. OBJ
3943 can be a string containing a file name or an integer file
3944 descriptor or port open for output on the file. The underlying
3945 system calls are `truncate' and `ftruncate'.
3946
3947 The return value is unspecified.
3948
e2d6569c 3949*** procedure: setvbuf PORT MODE [SIZE]
7a6f1ffa
GH
3950 Set the buffering mode for PORT. MODE can be:
3951 `_IONBF'
3952 non-buffered
3953
3954 `_IOLBF'
3955 line buffered
3956
3957 `_IOFBF'
3958 block buffered, using a newly allocated buffer of SIZE bytes.
3959 However if SIZE is zero or unspecified, the port will be made
3960 non-buffered.
3961
3962 This procedure should not be used after I/O has been performed with
3963 the port.
3964
3965 Ports are usually block buffered by default, with a default buffer
3966 size. Procedures e.g., *Note open-file: File Ports, which accept a
3967 mode string allow `0' to be added to request an unbuffered port.
3968
e2d6569c 3969*** procedure: fsync PORT/FD
6afcd3b2
GH
3970 Copies any unwritten data for the specified output file descriptor
3971 to disk. If PORT/FD is a port, its buffer is flushed before the
3972 underlying file descriptor is fsync'd. The return value is
3973 unspecified.
3974
e2d6569c 3975*** procedure: open-fdes PATH FLAGS [MODES]
6afcd3b2
GH
3976 Similar to `open' but returns a file descriptor instead of a port.
3977
e2d6569c 3978*** procedure: execle PATH ENV [ARG] ...
6afcd3b2
GH
3979 Similar to `execl', but the environment of the new process is
3980 specified by ENV, which must be a list of strings as returned by
3981 the `environ' procedure.
3982
3983 This procedure is currently implemented using the `execve' system
3984 call, but we call it `execle' because of its Scheme calling
3985 interface.
3986
e2d6569c 3987*** procedure: strerror ERRNO
ec4ab4fd
GH
3988 Returns the Unix error message corresponding to ERRNO, an integer.
3989
e2d6569c 3990*** procedure: primitive-exit [STATUS]
6afcd3b2
GH
3991 Terminate the current process without unwinding the Scheme stack.
3992 This is would typically be useful after a fork. The exit status
3993 is STATUS if supplied, otherwise zero.
3994
e2d6569c 3995*** procedure: times
6afcd3b2
GH
3996 Returns an object with information about real and processor time.
3997 The following procedures accept such an object as an argument and
3998 return a selected component:
3999
4000 `tms:clock'
4001 The current real time, expressed as time units relative to an
4002 arbitrary base.
4003
4004 `tms:utime'
4005 The CPU time units used by the calling process.
4006
4007 `tms:stime'
4008 The CPU time units used by the system on behalf of the
4009 calling process.
4010
4011 `tms:cutime'
4012 The CPU time units used by terminated child processes of the
4013 calling process, whose status has been collected (e.g., using
4014 `waitpid').
4015
4016 `tms:cstime'
4017 Similarly, the CPU times units used by the system on behalf of
4018 terminated child processes.
7ad3c1e7 4019
e2d6569c
JB
4020** Removed: list-length
4021** Removed: list-append, list-append!
4022** Removed: list-reverse, list-reverse!
4023
4024** array-map renamed to array-map!
4025
4026** serial-array-map renamed to serial-array-map!
4027
660f41fa
MD
4028** catch doesn't take #f as first argument any longer
4029
4030Previously, it was possible to pass #f instead of a key to `catch'.
4031That would cause `catch' to pass a jump buffer object to the procedure
4032passed as second argument. The procedure could then use this jump
4033buffer objekt as an argument to throw.
4034
4035This mechanism has been removed since its utility doesn't motivate the
4036extra complexity it introduces.
4037
332d00f6
JB
4038** The `#/' notation for lists now provokes a warning message from Guile.
4039This syntax will be removed from Guile in the near future.
4040
4041To disable the warning message, set the GUILE_HUSH environment
4042variable to any non-empty value.
4043
8cd57bd0
JB
4044** The newline character now prints as `#\newline', following the
4045normal Scheme notation, not `#\nl'.
4046
c484bf7f
JB
4047* Changes to the gh_ interface
4048
8986901b
JB
4049** The gh_enter function now takes care of loading the Guile startup files.
4050gh_enter works by calling scm_boot_guile; see the remarks below.
4051
5424b4f7
MD
4052** Function: void gh_write (SCM x)
4053
4054Write the printed representation of the scheme object x to the current
4055output port. Corresponds to the scheme level `write'.
4056
3a97e020
MD
4057** gh_list_length renamed to gh_length.
4058
8d6787b6
MG
4059** vector handling routines
4060
4061Several major changes. In particular, gh_vector() now resembles
4062(vector ...) (with a caveat -- see manual), and gh_make_vector() now
956328d2
MG
4063exists and behaves like (make-vector ...). gh_vset() and gh_vref()
4064have been renamed gh_vector_set_x() and gh_vector_ref(). Some missing
8d6787b6
MG
4065vector-related gh_ functions have been implemented.
4066
7fee59bd
MG
4067** pair and list routines
4068
4069Implemented several of the R4RS pair and list functions that were
4070missing.
4071
171422a9
MD
4072** gh_scm2doubles, gh_doubles2scm, gh_doubles2dvect
4073
4074New function. Converts double arrays back and forth between Scheme
4075and C.
4076
c484bf7f
JB
4077* Changes to the scm_ interface
4078
8986901b
JB
4079** The function scm_boot_guile now takes care of loading the startup files.
4080
4081Guile's primary initialization function, scm_boot_guile, now takes
4082care of loading `boot-9.scm', in the `ice-9' module, to initialize
4083Guile, define the module system, and put together some standard
4084bindings. It also loads `init.scm', which is intended to hold
4085site-specific initialization code.
4086
4087Since Guile cannot operate properly until boot-9.scm is loaded, there
4088is no reason to separate loading boot-9.scm from Guile's other
4089initialization processes.
4090
4091This job used to be done by scm_compile_shell_switches, which didn't
4092make much sense; in particular, it meant that people using Guile for
4093non-shell-like applications had to jump through hoops to get Guile
4094initialized properly.
4095
4096** The function scm_compile_shell_switches no longer loads the startup files.
4097Now, Guile always loads the startup files, whenever it is initialized;
4098see the notes above for scm_boot_guile and scm_load_startup_files.
4099
4100** Function: scm_load_startup_files
4101This new function takes care of loading Guile's initialization file
4102(`boot-9.scm'), and the site initialization file, `init.scm'. Since
4103this is always called by the Guile initialization process, it's
4104probably not too useful to call this yourself, but it's there anyway.
4105
87148d9e
JB
4106** The semantics of smob marking have changed slightly.
4107
4108The smob marking function (the `mark' member of the scm_smobfuns
4109structure) is no longer responsible for setting the mark bit on the
4110smob. The generic smob handling code in the garbage collector will
4111set this bit. The mark function need only ensure that any other
4112objects the smob refers to get marked.
4113
4114Note that this change means that the smob's GC8MARK bit is typically
4115already set upon entry to the mark function. Thus, marking functions
4116which look like this:
4117
4118 {
4119 if (SCM_GC8MARKP (ptr))
4120 return SCM_BOOL_F;
4121 SCM_SETGC8MARK (ptr);
4122 ... mark objects to which the smob refers ...
4123 }
4124
4125are now incorrect, since they will return early, and fail to mark any
4126other objects the smob refers to. Some code in the Guile library used
4127to work this way.
4128
1cf84ea5
JB
4129** The semantics of the I/O port functions in scm_ptobfuns have changed.
4130
4131If you have implemented your own I/O port type, by writing the
4132functions required by the scm_ptobfuns and then calling scm_newptob,
4133you will need to change your functions slightly.
4134
4135The functions in a scm_ptobfuns structure now expect the port itself
4136as their argument; they used to expect the `stream' member of the
4137port's scm_port_table structure. This allows functions in an
4138scm_ptobfuns structure to easily access the port's cell (and any flags
4139it its CAR), and the port's scm_port_table structure.
4140
4141Guile now passes the I/O port itself as the `port' argument in the
4142following scm_ptobfuns functions:
4143
4144 int (*free) (SCM port);
4145 int (*fputc) (int, SCM port);
4146 int (*fputs) (char *, SCM port);
4147 scm_sizet (*fwrite) SCM_P ((char *ptr,
4148 scm_sizet size,
4149 scm_sizet nitems,
4150 SCM port));
4151 int (*fflush) (SCM port);
4152 int (*fgetc) (SCM port);
4153 int (*fclose) (SCM port);
4154
4155The interfaces to the `mark', `print', `equalp', and `fgets' methods
4156are unchanged.
4157
4158If you have existing code which defines its own port types, it is easy
4159to convert your code to the new interface; simply apply SCM_STREAM to
4160the port argument to yield the value you code used to expect.
4161
4162Note that since both the port and the stream have the same type in the
4163C code --- they are both SCM values --- the C compiler will not remind
4164you if you forget to update your scm_ptobfuns functions.
4165
4166
933a7411
MD
4167** Function: int scm_internal_select (int fds,
4168 SELECT_TYPE *rfds,
4169 SELECT_TYPE *wfds,
4170 SELECT_TYPE *efds,
4171 struct timeval *timeout);
4172
4173This is a replacement for the `select' function provided by the OS.
4174It enables I/O blocking and sleeping to happen for one cooperative
4175thread without blocking other threads. It also avoids busy-loops in
4176these situations. It is intended that all I/O blocking and sleeping
4177will finally go through this function. Currently, this function is
4178only available on systems providing `gettimeofday' and `select'.
4179
5424b4f7
MD
4180** Function: SCM scm_internal_stack_catch (SCM tag,
4181 scm_catch_body_t body,
4182 void *body_data,
4183 scm_catch_handler_t handler,
4184 void *handler_data)
4185
4186A new sibling to the other two C level `catch' functions
4187scm_internal_catch and scm_internal_lazy_catch. Use it if you want
4188the stack to be saved automatically into the variable `the-last-stack'
4189(scm_the_last_stack_var) on error. This is necessary if you want to
4190use advanced error reporting, such as calling scm_display_error and
4191scm_display_backtrace. (They both take a stack object as argument.)
4192
df366c26
MD
4193** Function: SCM scm_spawn_thread (scm_catch_body_t body,
4194 void *body_data,
4195 scm_catch_handler_t handler,
4196 void *handler_data)
4197
4198Spawns a new thread. It does a job similar to
4199scm_call_with_new_thread but takes arguments more suitable when
4200spawning threads from application C code.
4201
88482b31
MD
4202** The hook scm_error_callback has been removed. It was originally
4203intended as a way for the user to install his own error handler. But
4204that method works badly since it intervenes between throw and catch,
4205thereby changing the semantics of expressions like (catch #t ...).
4206The correct way to do it is to use one of the C level catch functions
4207in throw.c: scm_internal_catch/lazy_catch/stack_catch.
4208
3a97e020
MD
4209** Removed functions:
4210
4211scm_obj_length, scm_list_length, scm_list_append, scm_list_append_x,
4212scm_list_reverse, scm_list_reverse_x
4213
4214** New macros: SCM_LISTn where n is one of the integers 0-9.
4215
4216These can be used for pretty list creation from C. The idea is taken
4217from Erick Gallesio's STk.
4218
298aa6e3
MD
4219** scm_array_map renamed to scm_array_map_x
4220
527da704
MD
4221** mbstrings are now removed
4222
4223This means that the type codes scm_tc7_mb_string and
4224scm_tc7_mb_substring has been removed.
4225
8cd57bd0
JB
4226** scm_gen_putc, scm_gen_puts, scm_gen_write, and scm_gen_getc have changed.
4227
4228Since we no longer support multi-byte strings, these I/O functions
4229have been simplified, and renamed. Here are their old names, and
4230their new names and arguments:
4231
4232scm_gen_putc -> void scm_putc (int c, SCM port);
4233scm_gen_puts -> void scm_puts (char *s, SCM port);
4234scm_gen_write -> void scm_lfwrite (char *ptr, scm_sizet size, SCM port);
4235scm_gen_getc -> void scm_getc (SCM port);
4236
4237
527da704
MD
4238** The macros SCM_TYP7D and SCM_TYP7SD has been removed.
4239
4240** The macro SCM_TYP7S has taken the role of the old SCM_TYP7D
4241
4242SCM_TYP7S now masks away the bit which distinguishes substrings from
4243strings.
4244
660f41fa
MD
4245** scm_catch_body_t: Backward incompatible change!
4246
4247Body functions to scm_internal_catch and friends do not any longer
4248take a second argument. This is because it is no longer possible to
4249pass a #f arg to catch.
4250
a8e05009
JB
4251** Calls to scm_protect_object and scm_unprotect now nest properly.
4252
4253The function scm_protect_object protects its argument from being freed
4254by the garbage collector. scm_unprotect_object removes that
4255protection.
4256
4257These functions now nest properly. That is, for every object O, there
4258is a counter which scm_protect_object(O) increments and
4259scm_unprotect_object(O) decrements, if the counter is greater than
4260zero. Every object's counter is zero when it is first created. If an
4261object's counter is greater than zero, the garbage collector will not
4262reclaim its storage.
4263
4264This allows you to use scm_protect_object in your code without
4265worrying that some other function you call will call
4266scm_unprotect_object, and allow it to be freed. Assuming that the
4267functions you call are well-behaved, and unprotect only those objects
4268they protect, you can follow the same rule and have confidence that
4269objects will be freed only at appropriate times.
4270
c484bf7f
JB
4271\f
4272Changes in Guile 1.2 (released Tuesday, June 24 1997):
cf78e9e8 4273
737c9113
JB
4274* Changes to the distribution
4275
832b09ed
JB
4276** Nightly snapshots are now available from ftp.red-bean.com.
4277The old server, ftp.cyclic.com, has been relinquished to its rightful
4278owner.
4279
4280Nightly snapshots of the Guile development sources are now available via
4281anonymous FTP from ftp.red-bean.com, as /pub/guile/guile-snap.tar.gz.
4282
4283Via the web, that's: ftp://ftp.red-bean.com/pub/guile/guile-snap.tar.gz
4284For getit, that's: ftp.red-bean.com:/pub/guile/guile-snap.tar.gz
4285
0fcab5ed
JB
4286** To run Guile without installing it, the procedure has changed a bit.
4287
4288If you used a separate build directory to compile Guile, you'll need
4289to include the build directory in SCHEME_LOAD_PATH, as well as the
4290source directory. See the `INSTALL' file for examples.
4291
737c9113
JB
4292* Changes to the procedure for linking libguile with your programs
4293
94982a4e
JB
4294** The standard Guile load path for Scheme code now includes
4295$(datadir)/guile (usually /usr/local/share/guile). This means that
4296you can install your own Scheme files there, and Guile will find them.
4297(Previous versions of Guile only checked a directory whose name
4298contained the Guile version number, so you had to re-install or move
4299your Scheme sources each time you installed a fresh version of Guile.)
4300
4301The load path also includes $(datadir)/guile/site; we recommend
4302putting individual Scheme files there. If you want to install a
4303package with multiple source files, create a directory for them under
4304$(datadir)/guile.
4305
4306** Guile 1.2 will now use the Rx regular expression library, if it is
4307installed on your system. When you are linking libguile into your own
4308programs, this means you will have to link against -lguile, -lqt (if
4309you configured Guile with thread support), and -lrx.
27590f82
JB
4310
4311If you are using autoconf to generate configuration scripts for your
4312application, the following lines should suffice to add the appropriate
4313libraries to your link command:
4314
4315### Find Rx, quickthreads and libguile.
4316AC_CHECK_LIB(rx, main)
4317AC_CHECK_LIB(qt, main)
4318AC_CHECK_LIB(guile, scm_shell)
4319
94982a4e
JB
4320The Guile 1.2 distribution does not contain sources for the Rx
4321library, as Guile 1.0 did. If you want to use Rx, you'll need to
4322retrieve it from a GNU FTP site and install it separately.
4323
b83b8bee
JB
4324* Changes to Scheme functions and syntax
4325
e035e7e6
MV
4326** The dynamic linking features of Guile are now enabled by default.
4327You can disable them by giving the `--disable-dynamic-linking' option
4328to configure.
4329
e035e7e6
MV
4330 (dynamic-link FILENAME)
4331
4332 Find the object file denoted by FILENAME (a string) and link it
4333 into the running Guile application. When everything works out,
4334 return a Scheme object suitable for representing the linked object
4335 file. Otherwise an error is thrown. How object files are
4336 searched is system dependent.
4337
4338 (dynamic-object? VAL)
4339
4340 Determine whether VAL represents a dynamically linked object file.
4341
4342 (dynamic-unlink DYNOBJ)
4343
4344 Unlink the indicated object file from the application. DYNOBJ
4345 should be one of the values returned by `dynamic-link'.
4346
4347 (dynamic-func FUNCTION DYNOBJ)
4348
4349 Search the C function indicated by FUNCTION (a string or symbol)
4350 in DYNOBJ and return some Scheme object that can later be used
4351 with `dynamic-call' to actually call this function. Right now,
4352 these Scheme objects are formed by casting the address of the
4353 function to `long' and converting this number to its Scheme
4354 representation.
4355
4356 (dynamic-call FUNCTION DYNOBJ)
4357
4358 Call the C function indicated by FUNCTION and DYNOBJ. The
4359 function is passed no arguments and its return value is ignored.
4360 When FUNCTION is something returned by `dynamic-func', call that
4361 function and ignore DYNOBJ. When FUNCTION is a string (or symbol,
4362 etc.), look it up in DYNOBJ; this is equivalent to
4363
4364 (dynamic-call (dynamic-func FUNCTION DYNOBJ) #f)
4365
4366 Interrupts are deferred while the C function is executing (with
4367 SCM_DEFER_INTS/SCM_ALLOW_INTS).
4368
4369 (dynamic-args-call FUNCTION DYNOBJ ARGS)
4370
4371 Call the C function indicated by FUNCTION and DYNOBJ, but pass it
4372 some arguments and return its return value. The C function is
4373 expected to take two arguments and return an `int', just like
4374 `main':
4375
4376 int c_func (int argc, char **argv);
4377
4378 ARGS must be a list of strings and is converted into an array of
4379 `char *'. The array is passed in ARGV and its size in ARGC. The
4380 return value is converted to a Scheme number and returned from the
4381 call to `dynamic-args-call'.
4382
0fcab5ed
JB
4383When dynamic linking is disabled or not supported on your system,
4384the above functions throw errors, but they are still available.
4385
e035e7e6
MV
4386Here is a small example that works on GNU/Linux:
4387
4388 (define libc-obj (dynamic-link "libc.so"))
4389 (dynamic-args-call 'rand libc-obj '())
4390
4391See the file `libguile/DYNAMIC-LINKING' for additional comments.
4392
27590f82 4393** The #/ syntax for module names is depreciated, and will be removed
6c0201ad 4394in a future version of Guile. Instead of
27590f82
JB
4395
4396 #/foo/bar/baz
4397
4398instead write
4399
4400 (foo bar baz)
4401
4402The latter syntax is more consistent with existing Lisp practice.
4403
5dade857
MV
4404** Guile now does fancier printing of structures. Structures are the
4405underlying implementation for records, which in turn are used to
4406implement modules, so all of these object now print differently and in
4407a more informative way.
4408
161029df
JB
4409The Scheme printer will examine the builtin variable *struct-printer*
4410whenever it needs to print a structure object. When this variable is
4411not `#f' it is deemed to be a procedure and will be applied to the
4412structure object and the output port. When *struct-printer* is `#f'
4413or the procedure return `#f' the structure object will be printed in
4414the boring #<struct 80458270> form.
5dade857
MV
4415
4416This hook is used by some routines in ice-9/boot-9.scm to implement
4417type specific printing routines. Please read the comments there about
4418"printing structs".
4419
4420One of the more specific uses of structs are records. The printing
4421procedure that could be passed to MAKE-RECORD-TYPE is now actually
4422called. It should behave like a *struct-printer* procedure (described
4423above).
4424
b83b8bee
JB
4425** Guile now supports a new R4RS-compliant syntax for keywords. A
4426token of the form #:NAME, where NAME has the same syntax as a Scheme
4427symbol, is the external representation of the keyword named NAME.
4428Keyword objects print using this syntax as well, so values containing
1e5afba0
JB
4429keyword objects can be read back into Guile. When used in an
4430expression, keywords are self-quoting objects.
b83b8bee
JB
4431
4432Guile suports this read syntax, and uses this print syntax, regardless
4433of the current setting of the `keyword' read option. The `keyword'
4434read option only controls whether Guile recognizes the `:NAME' syntax,
4435which is incompatible with R4RS. (R4RS says such token represent
4436symbols.)
737c9113
JB
4437
4438** Guile has regular expression support again. Guile 1.0 included
4439functions for matching regular expressions, based on the Rx library.
4440In Guile 1.1, the Guile/Rx interface was removed to simplify the
4441distribution, and thus Guile had no regular expression support. Guile
94982a4e
JB
44421.2 again supports the most commonly used functions, and supports all
4443of SCSH's regular expression functions.
2409cdfa 4444
94982a4e
JB
4445If your system does not include a POSIX regular expression library,
4446and you have not linked Guile with a third-party regexp library such as
4447Rx, these functions will not be available. You can tell whether your
4448Guile installation includes regular expression support by checking
4449whether the `*features*' list includes the `regex' symbol.
737c9113 4450
94982a4e 4451*** regexp functions
161029df 4452
94982a4e
JB
4453By default, Guile supports POSIX extended regular expressions. That
4454means that the characters `(', `)', `+' and `?' are special, and must
4455be escaped if you wish to match the literal characters.
e1a191a8 4456
94982a4e
JB
4457This regular expression interface was modeled after that implemented
4458by SCSH, the Scheme Shell. It is intended to be upwardly compatible
4459with SCSH regular expressions.
4460
4461**** Function: string-match PATTERN STR [START]
4462 Compile the string PATTERN into a regular expression and compare
4463 it with STR. The optional numeric argument START specifies the
4464 position of STR at which to begin matching.
4465
4466 `string-match' returns a "match structure" which describes what,
4467 if anything, was matched by the regular expression. *Note Match
4468 Structures::. If STR does not match PATTERN at all,
4469 `string-match' returns `#f'.
4470
4471 Each time `string-match' is called, it must compile its PATTERN
4472argument into a regular expression structure. This operation is
4473expensive, which makes `string-match' inefficient if the same regular
4474expression is used several times (for example, in a loop). For better
4475performance, you can compile a regular expression in advance and then
4476match strings against the compiled regexp.
4477
4478**** Function: make-regexp STR [FLAGS]
4479 Compile the regular expression described by STR, and return the
4480 compiled regexp structure. If STR does not describe a legal
4481 regular expression, `make-regexp' throws a
4482 `regular-expression-syntax' error.
4483
4484 FLAGS may be the bitwise-or of one or more of the following:
4485
4486**** Constant: regexp/extended
4487 Use POSIX Extended Regular Expression syntax when interpreting
4488 STR. If not set, POSIX Basic Regular Expression syntax is used.
4489 If the FLAGS argument is omitted, we assume regexp/extended.
4490
4491**** Constant: regexp/icase
4492 Do not differentiate case. Subsequent searches using the
4493 returned regular expression will be case insensitive.
4494
4495**** Constant: regexp/newline
4496 Match-any-character operators don't match a newline.
4497
4498 A non-matching list ([^...]) not containing a newline matches a
4499 newline.
4500
4501 Match-beginning-of-line operator (^) matches the empty string
4502 immediately after a newline, regardless of whether the FLAGS
4503 passed to regexp-exec contain regexp/notbol.
4504
4505 Match-end-of-line operator ($) matches the empty string
4506 immediately before a newline, regardless of whether the FLAGS
4507 passed to regexp-exec contain regexp/noteol.
4508
4509**** Function: regexp-exec REGEXP STR [START [FLAGS]]
4510 Match the compiled regular expression REGEXP against `str'. If
4511 the optional integer START argument is provided, begin matching
4512 from that position in the string. Return a match structure
4513 describing the results of the match, or `#f' if no match could be
4514 found.
4515
4516 FLAGS may be the bitwise-or of one or more of the following:
4517
4518**** Constant: regexp/notbol
4519 The match-beginning-of-line operator always fails to match (but
4520 see the compilation flag regexp/newline above) This flag may be
4521 used when different portions of a string are passed to
4522 regexp-exec and the beginning of the string should not be
4523 interpreted as the beginning of the line.
4524
4525**** Constant: regexp/noteol
4526 The match-end-of-line operator always fails to match (but see the
4527 compilation flag regexp/newline above)
4528
4529**** Function: regexp? OBJ
4530 Return `#t' if OBJ is a compiled regular expression, or `#f'
4531 otherwise.
4532
4533 Regular expressions are commonly used to find patterns in one string
4534and replace them with the contents of another string.
4535
4536**** Function: regexp-substitute PORT MATCH [ITEM...]
4537 Write to the output port PORT selected contents of the match
4538 structure MATCH. Each ITEM specifies what should be written, and
4539 may be one of the following arguments:
4540
4541 * A string. String arguments are written out verbatim.
4542
4543 * An integer. The submatch with that number is written.
4544
4545 * The symbol `pre'. The portion of the matched string preceding
4546 the regexp match is written.
4547
4548 * The symbol `post'. The portion of the matched string
4549 following the regexp match is written.
4550
4551 PORT may be `#f', in which case nothing is written; instead,
4552 `regexp-substitute' constructs a string from the specified ITEMs
4553 and returns that.
4554
4555**** Function: regexp-substitute/global PORT REGEXP TARGET [ITEM...]
4556 Similar to `regexp-substitute', but can be used to perform global
4557 substitutions on STR. Instead of taking a match structure as an
4558 argument, `regexp-substitute/global' takes two string arguments: a
4559 REGEXP string describing a regular expression, and a TARGET string
4560 which should be matched against this regular expression.
4561
4562 Each ITEM behaves as in REGEXP-SUBSTITUTE, with the following
4563 exceptions:
4564
4565 * A function may be supplied. When this function is called, it
4566 will be passed one argument: a match structure for a given
4567 regular expression match. It should return a string to be
4568 written out to PORT.
4569
4570 * The `post' symbol causes `regexp-substitute/global' to recurse
4571 on the unmatched portion of STR. This *must* be supplied in
4572 order to perform global search-and-replace on STR; if it is
4573 not present among the ITEMs, then `regexp-substitute/global'
4574 will return after processing a single match.
4575
4576*** Match Structures
4577
4578 A "match structure" is the object returned by `string-match' and
4579`regexp-exec'. It describes which portion of a string, if any, matched
4580the given regular expression. Match structures include: a reference to
4581the string that was checked for matches; the starting and ending
4582positions of the regexp match; and, if the regexp included any
4583parenthesized subexpressions, the starting and ending positions of each
4584submatch.
4585
4586 In each of the regexp match functions described below, the `match'
4587argument must be a match structure returned by a previous call to
4588`string-match' or `regexp-exec'. Most of these functions return some
4589information about the original target string that was matched against a
4590regular expression; we will call that string TARGET for easy reference.
4591
4592**** Function: regexp-match? OBJ
4593 Return `#t' if OBJ is a match structure returned by a previous
4594 call to `regexp-exec', or `#f' otherwise.
4595
4596**** Function: match:substring MATCH [N]
4597 Return the portion of TARGET matched by subexpression number N.
4598 Submatch 0 (the default) represents the entire regexp match. If
4599 the regular expression as a whole matched, but the subexpression
4600 number N did not match, return `#f'.
4601
4602**** Function: match:start MATCH [N]
4603 Return the starting position of submatch number N.
4604
4605**** Function: match:end MATCH [N]
4606 Return the ending position of submatch number N.
4607
4608**** Function: match:prefix MATCH
4609 Return the unmatched portion of TARGET preceding the regexp match.
4610
4611**** Function: match:suffix MATCH
4612 Return the unmatched portion of TARGET following the regexp match.
4613
4614**** Function: match:count MATCH
4615 Return the number of parenthesized subexpressions from MATCH.
4616 Note that the entire regular expression match itself counts as a
4617 subexpression, and failed submatches are included in the count.
4618
4619**** Function: match:string MATCH
4620 Return the original TARGET string.
4621
4622*** Backslash Escapes
4623
4624 Sometimes you will want a regexp to match characters like `*' or `$'
4625exactly. For example, to check whether a particular string represents
4626a menu entry from an Info node, it would be useful to match it against
4627a regexp like `^* [^:]*::'. However, this won't work; because the
4628asterisk is a metacharacter, it won't match the `*' at the beginning of
4629the string. In this case, we want to make the first asterisk un-magic.
4630
4631 You can do this by preceding the metacharacter with a backslash
4632character `\'. (This is also called "quoting" the metacharacter, and
4633is known as a "backslash escape".) When Guile sees a backslash in a
4634regular expression, it considers the following glyph to be an ordinary
4635character, no matter what special meaning it would ordinarily have.
4636Therefore, we can make the above example work by changing the regexp to
4637`^\* [^:]*::'. The `\*' sequence tells the regular expression engine
4638to match only a single asterisk in the target string.
4639
4640 Since the backslash is itself a metacharacter, you may force a
4641regexp to match a backslash in the target string by preceding the
4642backslash with itself. For example, to find variable references in a
4643TeX program, you might want to find occurrences of the string `\let\'
4644followed by any number of alphabetic characters. The regular expression
4645`\\let\\[A-Za-z]*' would do this: the double backslashes in the regexp
4646each match a single backslash in the target string.
4647
4648**** Function: regexp-quote STR
4649 Quote each special character found in STR with a backslash, and
4650 return the resulting string.
4651
4652 *Very important:* Using backslash escapes in Guile source code (as
4653in Emacs Lisp or C) can be tricky, because the backslash character has
4654special meaning for the Guile reader. For example, if Guile encounters
4655the character sequence `\n' in the middle of a string while processing
4656Scheme code, it replaces those characters with a newline character.
4657Similarly, the character sequence `\t' is replaced by a horizontal tab.
4658Several of these "escape sequences" are processed by the Guile reader
4659before your code is executed. Unrecognized escape sequences are
4660ignored: if the characters `\*' appear in a string, they will be
4661translated to the single character `*'.
4662
4663 This translation is obviously undesirable for regular expressions,
4664since we want to be able to include backslashes in a string in order to
4665escape regexp metacharacters. Therefore, to make sure that a backslash
4666is preserved in a string in your Guile program, you must use *two*
4667consecutive backslashes:
4668
4669 (define Info-menu-entry-pattern (make-regexp "^\\* [^:]*"))
4670
4671 The string in this example is preprocessed by the Guile reader before
4672any code is executed. The resulting argument to `make-regexp' is the
4673string `^\* [^:]*', which is what we really want.
4674
4675 This also means that in order to write a regular expression that
4676matches a single backslash character, the regular expression string in
4677the source code must include *four* backslashes. Each consecutive pair
4678of backslashes gets translated by the Guile reader to a single
4679backslash, and the resulting double-backslash is interpreted by the
4680regexp engine as matching a single backslash character. Hence:
4681
4682 (define tex-variable-pattern (make-regexp "\\\\let\\\\=[A-Za-z]*"))
4683
4684 The reason for the unwieldiness of this syntax is historical. Both
4685regular expression pattern matchers and Unix string processing systems
4686have traditionally used backslashes with the special meanings described
4687above. The POSIX regular expression specification and ANSI C standard
4688both require these semantics. Attempting to abandon either convention
4689would cause other kinds of compatibility problems, possibly more severe
4690ones. Therefore, without extending the Scheme reader to support
4691strings with different quoting conventions (an ungainly and confusing
4692extension when implemented in other languages), we must adhere to this
4693cumbersome escape syntax.
4694
7ad3c1e7
GH
4695* Changes to the gh_ interface
4696
4697* Changes to the scm_ interface
4698
4699* Changes to system call interfaces:
94982a4e 4700
7ad3c1e7 4701** The value returned by `raise' is now unspecified. It throws an exception
e1a191a8
GH
4702if an error occurs.
4703
94982a4e 4704*** A new procedure `sigaction' can be used to install signal handlers
115b09a5
GH
4705
4706(sigaction signum [action] [flags])
4707
4708signum is the signal number, which can be specified using the value
4709of SIGINT etc.
4710
4711If action is omitted, sigaction returns a pair: the CAR is the current
4712signal hander, which will be either an integer with the value SIG_DFL
4713(default action) or SIG_IGN (ignore), or the Scheme procedure which
4714handles the signal, or #f if a non-Scheme procedure handles the
4715signal. The CDR contains the current sigaction flags for the handler.
4716
4717If action is provided, it is installed as the new handler for signum.
4718action can be a Scheme procedure taking one argument, or the value of
4719SIG_DFL (default action) or SIG_IGN (ignore), or #f to restore
4720whatever signal handler was installed before sigaction was first used.
4721Flags can optionally be specified for the new handler (SA_RESTART is
4722always used if the system provides it, so need not be specified.) The
4723return value is a pair with information about the old handler as
4724described above.
4725
4726This interface does not provide access to the "signal blocking"
4727facility. Maybe this is not needed, since the thread support may
4728provide solutions to the problem of consistent access to data
4729structures.
e1a191a8 4730
94982a4e 4731*** A new procedure `flush-all-ports' is equivalent to running
89ea5b7c
GH
4732`force-output' on every port open for output.
4733
94982a4e
JB
4734** Guile now provides information on how it was built, via the new
4735global variable, %guile-build-info. This variable records the values
4736of the standard GNU makefile directory variables as an assocation
4737list, mapping variable names (symbols) onto directory paths (strings).
4738For example, to find out where the Guile link libraries were
4739installed, you can say:
4740
4741guile -c "(display (assq-ref %guile-build-info 'libdir)) (newline)"
4742
4743
4744* Changes to the scm_ interface
4745
4746** The new function scm_handle_by_message_noexit is just like the
4747existing scm_handle_by_message function, except that it doesn't call
4748exit to terminate the process. Instead, it prints a message and just
4749returns #f. This might be a more appropriate catch-all handler for
4750new dynamic roots and threads.
4751
cf78e9e8 4752\f
c484bf7f 4753Changes in Guile 1.1 (released Friday, May 16 1997):
f3b1485f
JB
4754
4755* Changes to the distribution.
4756
4757The Guile 1.0 distribution has been split up into several smaller
4758pieces:
4759guile-core --- the Guile interpreter itself.
4760guile-tcltk --- the interface between the Guile interpreter and
4761 Tcl/Tk; Tcl is an interpreter for a stringy language, and Tk
4762 is a toolkit for building graphical user interfaces.
4763guile-rgx-ctax --- the interface between Guile and the Rx regular
4764 expression matcher, and the translator for the Ctax
4765 programming language. These are packaged together because the
4766 Ctax translator uses Rx to parse Ctax source code.
4767
095936d2
JB
4768This NEWS file describes the changes made to guile-core since the 1.0
4769release.
4770
48d224d7
JB
4771We no longer distribute the documentation, since it was either out of
4772date, or incomplete. As soon as we have current documentation, we
4773will distribute it.
4774
0fcab5ed
JB
4775
4776
f3b1485f
JB
4777* Changes to the stand-alone interpreter
4778
48d224d7
JB
4779** guile now accepts command-line arguments compatible with SCSH, Olin
4780Shivers' Scheme Shell.
4781
4782In general, arguments are evaluated from left to right, but there are
4783exceptions. The following switches stop argument processing, and
4784stash all remaining command-line arguments as the value returned by
4785the (command-line) function.
4786 -s SCRIPT load Scheme source code from FILE, and exit
4787 -c EXPR evalute Scheme expression EXPR, and exit
4788 -- stop scanning arguments; run interactively
4789
4790The switches below are processed as they are encountered.
4791 -l FILE load Scheme source code from FILE
4792 -e FUNCTION after reading script, apply FUNCTION to
4793 command line arguments
4794 -ds do -s script at this point
4795 --emacs enable Emacs protocol (experimental)
4796 -h, --help display this help and exit
4797 -v, --version display version information and exit
4798 \ read arguments from following script lines
4799
4800So, for example, here is a Guile script named `ekko' (thanks, Olin)
4801which re-implements the traditional "echo" command:
4802
4803#!/usr/local/bin/guile -s
4804!#
4805(define (main args)
4806 (map (lambda (arg) (display arg) (display " "))
4807 (cdr args))
4808 (newline))
4809
4810(main (command-line))
4811
4812Suppose we invoke this script as follows:
4813
4814 ekko a speckled gecko
4815
4816Through the magic of Unix script processing (triggered by the `#!'
4817token at the top of the file), /usr/local/bin/guile receives the
4818following list of command-line arguments:
4819
4820 ("-s" "./ekko" "a" "speckled" "gecko")
4821
4822Unix inserts the name of the script after the argument specified on
4823the first line of the file (in this case, "-s"), and then follows that
4824with the arguments given to the script. Guile loads the script, which
4825defines the `main' function, and then applies it to the list of
4826remaining command-line arguments, ("a" "speckled" "gecko").
4827
095936d2
JB
4828In Unix, the first line of a script file must take the following form:
4829
4830#!INTERPRETER ARGUMENT
4831
4832where INTERPRETER is the absolute filename of the interpreter
4833executable, and ARGUMENT is a single command-line argument to pass to
4834the interpreter.
4835
4836You may only pass one argument to the interpreter, and its length is
4837limited. These restrictions can be annoying to work around, so Guile
4838provides a general mechanism (borrowed from, and compatible with,
4839SCSH) for circumventing them.
4840
4841If the ARGUMENT in a Guile script is a single backslash character,
4842`\', Guile will open the script file, parse arguments from its second
4843and subsequent lines, and replace the `\' with them. So, for example,
4844here is another implementation of the `ekko' script:
4845
4846#!/usr/local/bin/guile \
4847-e main -s
4848!#
4849(define (main args)
4850 (for-each (lambda (arg) (display arg) (display " "))
4851 (cdr args))
4852 (newline))
4853
4854If the user invokes this script as follows:
4855
4856 ekko a speckled gecko
4857
4858Unix expands this into
4859
4860 /usr/local/bin/guile \ ekko a speckled gecko
4861
4862When Guile sees the `\' argument, it replaces it with the arguments
4863read from the second line of the script, producing:
4864
4865 /usr/local/bin/guile -e main -s ekko a speckled gecko
4866
4867This tells Guile to load the `ekko' script, and apply the function
4868`main' to the argument list ("a" "speckled" "gecko").
4869
4870Here is how Guile parses the command-line arguments:
4871- Each space character terminates an argument. This means that two
4872 spaces in a row introduce an empty-string argument.
4873- The tab character is not permitted (unless you quote it with the
4874 backslash character, as described below), to avoid confusion.
4875- The newline character terminates the sequence of arguments, and will
4876 also terminate a final non-empty argument. (However, a newline
4877 following a space will not introduce a final empty-string argument;
4878 it only terminates the argument list.)
4879- The backslash character is the escape character. It escapes
4880 backslash, space, tab, and newline. The ANSI C escape sequences
4881 like \n and \t are also supported. These produce argument
4882 constituents; the two-character combination \n doesn't act like a
4883 terminating newline. The escape sequence \NNN for exactly three
4884 octal digits reads as the character whose ASCII code is NNN. As
4885 above, characters produced this way are argument constituents.
4886 Backslash followed by other characters is not allowed.
4887
48d224d7
JB
4888* Changes to the procedure for linking libguile with your programs
4889
4890** Guile now builds and installs a shared guile library, if your
4891system support shared libraries. (It still builds a static library on
4892all systems.) Guile automatically detects whether your system
4893supports shared libraries. To prevent Guile from buildisg shared
4894libraries, pass the `--disable-shared' flag to the configure script.
4895
4896Guile takes longer to compile when it builds shared libraries, because
4897it must compile every file twice --- once to produce position-
4898independent object code, and once to produce normal object code.
4899
4900** The libthreads library has been merged into libguile.
4901
4902To link a program against Guile, you now need only link against
4903-lguile and -lqt; -lthreads is no longer needed. If you are using
4904autoconf to generate configuration scripts for your application, the
4905following lines should suffice to add the appropriate libraries to
4906your link command:
4907
4908### Find quickthreads and libguile.
4909AC_CHECK_LIB(qt, main)
4910AC_CHECK_LIB(guile, scm_shell)
f3b1485f
JB
4911
4912* Changes to Scheme functions
4913
095936d2
JB
4914** Guile Scheme's special syntax for keyword objects is now optional,
4915and disabled by default.
4916
4917The syntax variation from R4RS made it difficult to port some
4918interesting packages to Guile. The routines which accepted keyword
4919arguments (mostly in the module system) have been modified to also
4920accept symbols whose names begin with `:'.
4921
4922To change the keyword syntax, you must first import the (ice-9 debug)
4923module:
4924 (use-modules (ice-9 debug))
4925
4926Then you can enable the keyword syntax as follows:
4927 (read-set! keywords 'prefix)
4928
4929To disable keyword syntax, do this:
4930 (read-set! keywords #f)
4931
4932** Many more primitive functions accept shared substrings as
4933arguments. In the past, these functions required normal, mutable
4934strings as arguments, although they never made use of this
4935restriction.
4936
4937** The uniform array functions now operate on byte vectors. These
4938functions are `array-fill!', `serial-array-copy!', `array-copy!',
4939`serial-array-map', `array-map', `array-for-each', and
4940`array-index-map!'.
4941
4942** The new functions `trace' and `untrace' implement simple debugging
4943support for Scheme functions.
4944
4945The `trace' function accepts any number of procedures as arguments,
4946and tells the Guile interpreter to display each procedure's name and
4947arguments each time the procedure is invoked. When invoked with no
4948arguments, `trace' returns the list of procedures currently being
4949traced.
4950
4951The `untrace' function accepts any number of procedures as arguments,
4952and tells the Guile interpreter not to trace them any more. When
4953invoked with no arguments, `untrace' untraces all curretly traced
4954procedures.
4955
4956The tracing in Guile has an advantage over most other systems: we
4957don't create new procedure objects, but mark the procedure objects
4958themselves. This means that anonymous and internal procedures can be
4959traced.
4960
4961** The function `assert-repl-prompt' has been renamed to
4962`set-repl-prompt!'. It takes one argument, PROMPT.
4963- If PROMPT is #f, the Guile read-eval-print loop will not prompt.
4964- If PROMPT is a string, we use it as a prompt.
4965- If PROMPT is a procedure accepting no arguments, we call it, and
4966 display the result as a prompt.
4967- Otherwise, we display "> ".
4968
4969** The new function `eval-string' reads Scheme expressions from a
4970string and evaluates them, returning the value of the last expression
4971in the string. If the string contains no expressions, it returns an
4972unspecified value.
4973
4974** The new function `thunk?' returns true iff its argument is a
4975procedure of zero arguments.
4976
4977** `defined?' is now a builtin function, instead of syntax. This
4978means that its argument should be quoted. It returns #t iff its
4979argument is bound in the current module.
4980
4981** The new syntax `use-modules' allows you to add new modules to your
4982environment without re-typing a complete `define-module' form. It
4983accepts any number of module names as arguments, and imports their
4984public bindings into the current module.
4985
4986** The new function (module-defined? NAME MODULE) returns true iff
4987NAME, a symbol, is defined in MODULE, a module object.
4988
4989** The new function `builtin-bindings' creates and returns a hash
4990table containing copies of all the root module's bindings.
4991
4992** The new function `builtin-weak-bindings' does the same as
4993`builtin-bindings', but creates a doubly-weak hash table.
4994
4995** The `equal?' function now considers variable objects to be
4996equivalent if they have the same name and the same value.
4997
4998** The new function `command-line' returns the command-line arguments
4999given to Guile, as a list of strings.
5000
5001When using guile as a script interpreter, `command-line' returns the
5002script's arguments; those processed by the interpreter (like `-s' or
5003`-c') are omitted. (In other words, you get the normal, expected
5004behavior.) Any application that uses scm_shell to process its
5005command-line arguments gets this behavior as well.
5006
5007** The new function `load-user-init' looks for a file called `.guile'
5008in the user's home directory, and loads it if it exists. This is
5009mostly for use by the code generated by scm_compile_shell_switches,
5010but we thought it might also be useful in other circumstances.
5011
5012** The new function `log10' returns the base-10 logarithm of its
5013argument.
5014
5015** Changes to I/O functions
5016
6c0201ad 5017*** The functions `read', `primitive-load', `read-and-eval!', and
095936d2
JB
5018`primitive-load-path' no longer take optional arguments controlling
5019case insensitivity and a `#' parser.
5020
5021Case sensitivity is now controlled by a read option called
5022`case-insensitive'. The user can add new `#' syntaxes with the
5023`read-hash-extend' function (see below).
5024
5025*** The new function `read-hash-extend' allows the user to change the
5026syntax of Guile Scheme in a somewhat controlled way.
5027
5028(read-hash-extend CHAR PROC)
5029 When parsing S-expressions, if we read a `#' character followed by
5030 the character CHAR, use PROC to parse an object from the stream.
5031 If PROC is #f, remove any parsing procedure registered for CHAR.
5032
5033 The reader applies PROC to two arguments: CHAR and an input port.
5034
6c0201ad 5035*** The new functions read-delimited and read-delimited! provide a
095936d2
JB
5036general mechanism for doing delimited input on streams.
5037
5038(read-delimited DELIMS [PORT HANDLE-DELIM])
5039 Read until we encounter one of the characters in DELIMS (a string),
5040 or end-of-file. PORT is the input port to read from; it defaults to
5041 the current input port. The HANDLE-DELIM parameter determines how
5042 the terminating character is handled; it should be one of the
5043 following symbols:
5044
5045 'trim omit delimiter from result
5046 'peek leave delimiter character in input stream
5047 'concat append delimiter character to returned value
5048 'split return a pair: (RESULT . TERMINATOR)
5049
5050 HANDLE-DELIM defaults to 'peek.
5051
5052(read-delimited! DELIMS BUF [PORT HANDLE-DELIM START END])
5053 A side-effecting variant of `read-delimited'.
5054
5055 The data is written into the string BUF at the indices in the
5056 half-open interval [START, END); the default interval is the whole
5057 string: START = 0 and END = (string-length BUF). The values of
5058 START and END must specify a well-defined interval in BUF, i.e.
5059 0 <= START <= END <= (string-length BUF).
5060
5061 It returns NBYTES, the number of bytes read. If the buffer filled
5062 up without a delimiter character being found, it returns #f. If the
5063 port is at EOF when the read starts, it returns the EOF object.
5064
5065 If an integer is returned (i.e., the read is successfully terminated
5066 by reading a delimiter character), then the HANDLE-DELIM parameter
5067 determines how to handle the terminating character. It is described
5068 above, and defaults to 'peek.
5069
5070(The descriptions of these functions were borrowed from the SCSH
5071manual, by Olin Shivers and Brian Carlstrom.)
5072
5073*** The `%read-delimited!' function is the primitive used to implement
5074`read-delimited' and `read-delimited!'.
5075
5076(%read-delimited! DELIMS BUF GOBBLE? [PORT START END])
5077
5078This returns a pair of values: (TERMINATOR . NUM-READ).
5079- TERMINATOR describes why the read was terminated. If it is a
5080 character or the eof object, then that is the value that terminated
5081 the read. If it is #f, the function filled the buffer without finding
5082 a delimiting character.
5083- NUM-READ is the number of characters read into BUF.
5084
5085If the read is successfully terminated by reading a delimiter
5086character, then the gobble? parameter determines what to do with the
5087terminating character. If true, the character is removed from the
5088input stream; if false, the character is left in the input stream
5089where a subsequent read operation will retrieve it. In either case,
5090the character is also the first value returned by the procedure call.
5091
5092(The descriptions of this function was borrowed from the SCSH manual,
5093by Olin Shivers and Brian Carlstrom.)
5094
5095*** The `read-line' and `read-line!' functions have changed; they now
5096trim the terminator by default; previously they appended it to the
5097returned string. For the old behavior, use (read-line PORT 'concat).
5098
5099*** The functions `uniform-array-read!' and `uniform-array-write!' now
5100take new optional START and END arguments, specifying the region of
5101the array to read and write.
5102
f348c807
JB
5103*** The `ungetc-char-ready?' function has been removed. We feel it's
5104inappropriate for an interface to expose implementation details this
5105way.
095936d2
JB
5106
5107** Changes to the Unix library and system call interface
5108
5109*** The new fcntl function provides access to the Unix `fcntl' system
5110call.
5111
5112(fcntl PORT COMMAND VALUE)
5113 Apply COMMAND to PORT's file descriptor, with VALUE as an argument.
5114 Values for COMMAND are:
5115
5116 F_DUPFD duplicate a file descriptor
5117 F_GETFD read the descriptor's close-on-exec flag
5118 F_SETFD set the descriptor's close-on-exec flag to VALUE
5119 F_GETFL read the descriptor's flags, as set on open
5120 F_SETFL set the descriptor's flags, as set on open to VALUE
5121 F_GETOWN return the process ID of a socket's owner, for SIGIO
5122 F_SETOWN set the process that owns a socket to VALUE, for SIGIO
5123 FD_CLOEXEC not sure what this is
5124
5125For details, see the documentation for the fcntl system call.
5126
5127*** The arguments to `select' have changed, for compatibility with
5128SCSH. The TIMEOUT parameter may now be non-integral, yielding the
5129expected behavior. The MILLISECONDS parameter has been changed to
5130MICROSECONDS, to more closely resemble the underlying system call.
5131The RVEC, WVEC, and EVEC arguments can now be vectors; the type of the
5132corresponding return set will be the same.
5133
5134*** The arguments to the `mknod' system call have changed. They are
5135now:
5136
5137(mknod PATH TYPE PERMS DEV)
5138 Create a new file (`node') in the file system. PATH is the name of
5139 the file to create. TYPE is the kind of file to create; it should
5140 be 'fifo, 'block-special, or 'char-special. PERMS specifies the
5141 permission bits to give the newly created file. If TYPE is
5142 'block-special or 'char-special, DEV specifies which device the
5143 special file refers to; its interpretation depends on the kind of
5144 special file being created.
5145
5146*** The `fork' function has been renamed to `primitive-fork', to avoid
5147clashing with various SCSH forks.
5148
5149*** The `recv' and `recvfrom' functions have been renamed to `recv!'
5150and `recvfrom!'. They no longer accept a size for a second argument;
5151you must pass a string to hold the received value. They no longer
5152return the buffer. Instead, `recv' returns the length of the message
5153received, and `recvfrom' returns a pair containing the packet's length
6c0201ad 5154and originating address.
095936d2
JB
5155
5156*** The file descriptor datatype has been removed, as have the
5157`read-fd', `write-fd', `close', `lseek', and `dup' functions.
5158We plan to replace these functions with a SCSH-compatible interface.
5159
5160*** The `create' function has been removed; it's just a special case
5161of `open'.
5162
5163*** There are new functions to break down process termination status
5164values. In the descriptions below, STATUS is a value returned by
5165`waitpid'.
5166
5167(status:exit-val STATUS)
5168 If the child process exited normally, this function returns the exit
5169 code for the child process (i.e., the value passed to exit, or
5170 returned from main). If the child process did not exit normally,
5171 this function returns #f.
5172
5173(status:stop-sig STATUS)
5174 If the child process was suspended by a signal, this function
5175 returns the signal that suspended the child. Otherwise, it returns
5176 #f.
5177
5178(status:term-sig STATUS)
5179 If the child process terminated abnormally, this function returns
5180 the signal that terminated the child. Otherwise, this function
5181 returns false.
5182
5183POSIX promises that exactly one of these functions will return true on
5184a valid STATUS value.
5185
5186These functions are compatible with SCSH.
5187
5188*** There are new accessors and setters for the broken-out time vectors
48d224d7
JB
5189returned by `localtime', `gmtime', and that ilk. They are:
5190
5191 Component Accessor Setter
5192 ========================= ============ ============
5193 seconds tm:sec set-tm:sec
5194 minutes tm:min set-tm:min
5195 hours tm:hour set-tm:hour
5196 day of the month tm:mday set-tm:mday
5197 month tm:mon set-tm:mon
5198 year tm:year set-tm:year
5199 day of the week tm:wday set-tm:wday
5200 day in the year tm:yday set-tm:yday
5201 daylight saving time tm:isdst set-tm:isdst
5202 GMT offset, seconds tm:gmtoff set-tm:gmtoff
5203 name of time zone tm:zone set-tm:zone
5204
095936d2
JB
5205*** There are new accessors for the vectors returned by `uname',
5206describing the host system:
48d224d7
JB
5207
5208 Component Accessor
5209 ============================================== ================
5210 name of the operating system implementation utsname:sysname
5211 network name of this machine utsname:nodename
5212 release level of the operating system utsname:release
5213 version level of the operating system utsname:version
5214 machine hardware platform utsname:machine
5215
095936d2
JB
5216*** There are new accessors for the vectors returned by `getpw',
5217`getpwnam', `getpwuid', and `getpwent', describing entries from the
5218system's user database:
5219
5220 Component Accessor
5221 ====================== =================
5222 user name passwd:name
5223 user password passwd:passwd
5224 user id passwd:uid
5225 group id passwd:gid
5226 real name passwd:gecos
5227 home directory passwd:dir
5228 shell program passwd:shell
5229
5230*** There are new accessors for the vectors returned by `getgr',
5231`getgrnam', `getgrgid', and `getgrent', describing entries from the
5232system's group database:
5233
5234 Component Accessor
5235 ======================= ============
5236 group name group:name
5237 group password group:passwd
5238 group id group:gid
5239 group members group:mem
5240
5241*** There are new accessors for the vectors returned by `gethost',
5242`gethostbyaddr', `gethostbyname', and `gethostent', describing
5243internet hosts:
5244
5245 Component Accessor
5246 ========================= ===============
5247 official name of host hostent:name
5248 alias list hostent:aliases
5249 host address type hostent:addrtype
5250 length of address hostent:length
5251 list of addresses hostent:addr-list
5252
5253*** There are new accessors for the vectors returned by `getnet',
5254`getnetbyaddr', `getnetbyname', and `getnetent', describing internet
5255networks:
5256
5257 Component Accessor
5258 ========================= ===============
5259 official name of net netent:name
5260 alias list netent:aliases
5261 net number type netent:addrtype
5262 net number netent:net
5263
5264*** There are new accessors for the vectors returned by `getproto',
5265`getprotobyname', `getprotobynumber', and `getprotoent', describing
5266internet protocols:
5267
5268 Component Accessor
5269 ========================= ===============
5270 official protocol name protoent:name
5271 alias list protoent:aliases
5272 protocol number protoent:proto
5273
5274*** There are new accessors for the vectors returned by `getserv',
5275`getservbyname', `getservbyport', and `getservent', describing
5276internet protocols:
5277
5278 Component Accessor
5279 ========================= ===============
6c0201ad 5280 official service name servent:name
095936d2 5281 alias list servent:aliases
6c0201ad
TTN
5282 port number servent:port
5283 protocol to use servent:proto
095936d2
JB
5284
5285*** There are new accessors for the sockaddr structures returned by
5286`accept', `getsockname', `getpeername', `recvfrom!':
5287
5288 Component Accessor
5289 ======================================== ===============
6c0201ad 5290 address format (`family') sockaddr:fam
095936d2
JB
5291 path, for file domain addresses sockaddr:path
5292 address, for internet domain addresses sockaddr:addr
5293 TCP or UDP port, for internet sockaddr:port
5294
5295*** The `getpwent', `getgrent', `gethostent', `getnetent',
5296`getprotoent', and `getservent' functions now return #f at the end of
5297the user database. (They used to throw an exception.)
5298
5299Note that calling MUMBLEent function is equivalent to calling the
5300corresponding MUMBLE function with no arguments.
5301
5302*** The `setpwent', `setgrent', `sethostent', `setnetent',
5303`setprotoent', and `setservent' routines now take no arguments.
5304
5305*** The `gethost', `getproto', `getnet', and `getserv' functions now
5306provide more useful information when they throw an exception.
5307
5308*** The `lnaof' function has been renamed to `inet-lnaof'.
5309
5310*** Guile now claims to have the `current-time' feature.
5311
5312*** The `mktime' function now takes an optional second argument ZONE,
5313giving the time zone to use for the conversion. ZONE should be a
5314string, in the same format as expected for the "TZ" environment variable.
5315
5316*** The `strptime' function now returns a pair (TIME . COUNT), where
5317TIME is the parsed time as a vector, and COUNT is the number of
5318characters from the string left unparsed. This function used to
5319return the remaining characters as a string.
5320
5321*** The `gettimeofday' function has replaced the old `time+ticks' function.
5322The return value is now (SECONDS . MICROSECONDS); the fractional
5323component is no longer expressed in "ticks".
5324
5325*** The `ticks/sec' constant has been removed, in light of the above change.
6685dc83 5326
ea00ecba
MG
5327* Changes to the gh_ interface
5328
5329** gh_eval_str() now returns an SCM object which is the result of the
5330evaluation
5331
aaef0d2a
MG
5332** gh_scm2str() now copies the Scheme data to a caller-provided C
5333array
5334
5335** gh_scm2newstr() now makes a C array, copies the Scheme data to it,
5336and returns the array
5337
5338** gh_scm2str0() is gone: there is no need to distinguish
5339null-terminated from non-null-terminated, since gh_scm2newstr() allows
5340the user to interpret the data both ways.
5341
f3b1485f
JB
5342* Changes to the scm_ interface
5343
095936d2
JB
5344** The new function scm_symbol_value0 provides an easy way to get a
5345symbol's value from C code:
5346
5347SCM scm_symbol_value0 (char *NAME)
5348 Return the value of the symbol named by the null-terminated string
5349 NAME in the current module. If the symbol named NAME is unbound in
5350 the current module, return SCM_UNDEFINED.
5351
5352** The new function scm_sysintern0 creates new top-level variables,
5353without assigning them a value.
5354
5355SCM scm_sysintern0 (char *NAME)
5356 Create a new Scheme top-level variable named NAME. NAME is a
5357 null-terminated string. Return the variable's value cell.
5358
5359** The function scm_internal_catch is the guts of catch. It handles
5360all the mechanics of setting up a catch target, invoking the catch
5361body, and perhaps invoking the handler if the body does a throw.
5362
5363The function is designed to be usable from C code, but is general
5364enough to implement all the semantics Guile Scheme expects from throw.
5365
5366TAG is the catch tag. Typically, this is a symbol, but this function
5367doesn't actually care about that.
5368
5369BODY is a pointer to a C function which runs the body of the catch;
5370this is the code you can throw from. We call it like this:
5371 BODY (BODY_DATA, JMPBUF)
5372where:
5373 BODY_DATA is just the BODY_DATA argument we received; we pass it
5374 through to BODY as its first argument. The caller can make
5375 BODY_DATA point to anything useful that BODY might need.
5376 JMPBUF is the Scheme jmpbuf object corresponding to this catch,
5377 which we have just created and initialized.
5378
5379HANDLER is a pointer to a C function to deal with a throw to TAG,
5380should one occur. We call it like this:
5381 HANDLER (HANDLER_DATA, THROWN_TAG, THROW_ARGS)
5382where
5383 HANDLER_DATA is the HANDLER_DATA argument we recevied; it's the
5384 same idea as BODY_DATA above.
5385 THROWN_TAG is the tag that the user threw to; usually this is
5386 TAG, but it could be something else if TAG was #t (i.e., a
5387 catch-all), or the user threw to a jmpbuf.
5388 THROW_ARGS is the list of arguments the user passed to the THROW
5389 function.
5390
5391BODY_DATA is just a pointer we pass through to BODY. HANDLER_DATA
5392is just a pointer we pass through to HANDLER. We don't actually
5393use either of those pointers otherwise ourselves. The idea is
5394that, if our caller wants to communicate something to BODY or
5395HANDLER, it can pass a pointer to it as MUMBLE_DATA, which BODY and
5396HANDLER can then use. Think of it as a way to make BODY and
5397HANDLER closures, not just functions; MUMBLE_DATA points to the
5398enclosed variables.
5399
5400Of course, it's up to the caller to make sure that any data a
5401MUMBLE_DATA needs is protected from GC. A common way to do this is
5402to make MUMBLE_DATA a pointer to data stored in an automatic
5403structure variable; since the collector must scan the stack for
5404references anyway, this assures that any references in MUMBLE_DATA
5405will be found.
5406
5407** The new function scm_internal_lazy_catch is exactly like
5408scm_internal_catch, except:
5409
5410- It does not unwind the stack (this is the major difference).
5411- If handler returns, its value is returned from the throw.
5412- BODY always receives #f as its JMPBUF argument (since there's no
5413 jmpbuf associated with a lazy catch, because we don't unwind the
5414 stack.)
5415
5416** scm_body_thunk is a new body function you can pass to
5417scm_internal_catch if you want the body to be like Scheme's `catch'
5418--- a thunk, or a function of one argument if the tag is #f.
5419
5420BODY_DATA is a pointer to a scm_body_thunk_data structure, which
5421contains the Scheme procedure to invoke as the body, and the tag
5422we're catching. If the tag is #f, then we pass JMPBUF (created by
5423scm_internal_catch) to the body procedure; otherwise, the body gets
5424no arguments.
5425
5426** scm_handle_by_proc is a new handler function you can pass to
5427scm_internal_catch if you want the handler to act like Scheme's catch
5428--- call a procedure with the tag and the throw arguments.
5429
5430If the user does a throw to this catch, this function runs a handler
5431procedure written in Scheme. HANDLER_DATA is a pointer to an SCM
5432variable holding the Scheme procedure object to invoke. It ought to
5433be a pointer to an automatic variable (i.e., one living on the stack),
5434or the procedure object should be otherwise protected from GC.
5435
5436** scm_handle_by_message is a new handler function to use with
5437`scm_internal_catch' if you want Guile to print a message and die.
5438It's useful for dealing with throws to uncaught keys at the top level.
5439
5440HANDLER_DATA, if non-zero, is assumed to be a char * pointing to a
5441message header to print; if zero, we use "guile" instead. That
5442text is followed by a colon, then the message described by ARGS.
5443
5444** The return type of scm_boot_guile is now void; the function does
5445not return a value, and indeed, never returns at all.
5446
f3b1485f
JB
5447** The new function scm_shell makes it easy for user applications to
5448process command-line arguments in a way that is compatible with the
5449stand-alone guile interpreter (which is in turn compatible with SCSH,
5450the Scheme shell).
5451
5452To use the scm_shell function, first initialize any guile modules
5453linked into your application, and then call scm_shell with the values
7ed46dc8 5454of ARGC and ARGV your `main' function received. scm_shell will add
f3b1485f
JB
5455any SCSH-style meta-arguments from the top of the script file to the
5456argument vector, and then process the command-line arguments. This
5457generally means loading a script file or starting up an interactive
5458command interpreter. For details, see "Changes to the stand-alone
5459interpreter" above.
5460
095936d2 5461** The new functions scm_get_meta_args and scm_count_argv help you
6c0201ad 5462implement the SCSH-style meta-argument, `\'.
095936d2
JB
5463
5464char **scm_get_meta_args (int ARGC, char **ARGV)
5465 If the second element of ARGV is a string consisting of a single
5466 backslash character (i.e. "\\" in Scheme notation), open the file
5467 named by the following argument, parse arguments from it, and return
5468 the spliced command line. The returned array is terminated by a
5469 null pointer.
6c0201ad 5470
095936d2
JB
5471 For details of argument parsing, see above, under "guile now accepts
5472 command-line arguments compatible with SCSH..."
5473
5474int scm_count_argv (char **ARGV)
5475 Count the arguments in ARGV, assuming it is terminated by a null
5476 pointer.
5477
5478For an example of how these functions might be used, see the source
5479code for the function scm_shell in libguile/script.c.
5480
5481You will usually want to use scm_shell instead of calling this
5482function yourself.
5483
5484** The new function scm_compile_shell_switches turns an array of
5485command-line arguments into Scheme code to carry out the actions they
5486describe. Given ARGC and ARGV, it returns a Scheme expression to
5487evaluate, and calls scm_set_program_arguments to make any remaining
5488command-line arguments available to the Scheme code. For example,
5489given the following arguments:
5490
5491 -e main -s ekko a speckled gecko
5492
5493scm_set_program_arguments will return the following expression:
5494
5495 (begin (load "ekko") (main (command-line)) (quit))
5496
5497You will usually want to use scm_shell instead of calling this
5498function yourself.
5499
5500** The function scm_shell_usage prints a usage message appropriate for
5501an interpreter that uses scm_compile_shell_switches to handle its
5502command-line arguments.
5503
5504void scm_shell_usage (int FATAL, char *MESSAGE)
5505 Print a usage message to the standard error output. If MESSAGE is
5506 non-zero, write it before the usage message, followed by a newline.
5507 If FATAL is non-zero, exit the process, using FATAL as the
5508 termination status. (If you want to be compatible with Guile,
5509 always use 1 as the exit status when terminating due to command-line
5510 usage problems.)
5511
5512You will usually want to use scm_shell instead of calling this
5513function yourself.
48d224d7
JB
5514
5515** scm_eval_0str now returns SCM_UNSPECIFIED if the string contains no
095936d2
JB
5516expressions. It used to return SCM_EOL. Earth-shattering.
5517
5518** The macros for declaring scheme objects in C code have been
5519rearranged slightly. They are now:
5520
5521SCM_SYMBOL (C_NAME, SCHEME_NAME)
5522 Declare a static SCM variable named C_NAME, and initialize it to
5523 point to the Scheme symbol whose name is SCHEME_NAME. C_NAME should
5524 be a C identifier, and SCHEME_NAME should be a C string.
5525
5526SCM_GLOBAL_SYMBOL (C_NAME, SCHEME_NAME)
5527 Just like SCM_SYMBOL, but make C_NAME globally visible.
5528
5529SCM_VCELL (C_NAME, SCHEME_NAME)
5530 Create a global variable at the Scheme level named SCHEME_NAME.
5531 Declare a static SCM variable named C_NAME, and initialize it to
5532 point to the Scheme variable's value cell.
5533
5534SCM_GLOBAL_VCELL (C_NAME, SCHEME_NAME)
5535 Just like SCM_VCELL, but make C_NAME globally visible.
5536
5537The `guile-snarf' script writes initialization code for these macros
5538to its standard output, given C source code as input.
5539
5540The SCM_GLOBAL macro is gone.
5541
5542** The scm_read_line and scm_read_line_x functions have been replaced
5543by Scheme code based on the %read-delimited! procedure (known to C
5544code as scm_read_delimited_x). See its description above for more
5545information.
48d224d7 5546
095936d2
JB
5547** The function scm_sys_open has been renamed to scm_open. It now
5548returns a port instead of an FD object.
ea00ecba 5549
095936d2
JB
5550* The dynamic linking support has changed. For more information, see
5551libguile/DYNAMIC-LINKING.
ea00ecba 5552
f7b47737
JB
5553\f
5554Guile 1.0b3
3065a62a 5555
f3b1485f
JB
5556User-visible changes from Thursday, September 5, 1996 until Guile 1.0
5557(Sun 5 Jan 1997):
3065a62a 5558
4b521edb 5559* Changes to the 'guile' program:
3065a62a 5560
4b521edb
JB
5561** Guile now loads some new files when it starts up. Guile first
5562searches the load path for init.scm, and loads it if found. Then, if
5563Guile is not being used to execute a script, and the user's home
5564directory contains a file named `.guile', Guile loads that.
c6486f8a 5565
4b521edb 5566** You can now use Guile as a shell script interpreter.
3065a62a
JB
5567
5568To paraphrase the SCSH manual:
5569
5570 When Unix tries to execute an executable file whose first two
5571 characters are the `#!', it treats the file not as machine code to
5572 be directly executed by the native processor, but as source code
5573 to be executed by some interpreter. The interpreter to use is
5574 specified immediately after the #! sequence on the first line of
5575 the source file. The kernel reads in the name of the interpreter,
5576 and executes that instead. It passes the interpreter the source
5577 filename as its first argument, with the original arguments
5578 following. Consult the Unix man page for the `exec' system call
5579 for more information.
5580
1a1945be
JB
5581Now you can use Guile as an interpreter, using a mechanism which is a
5582compatible subset of that provided by SCSH.
5583
3065a62a
JB
5584Guile now recognizes a '-s' command line switch, whose argument is the
5585name of a file of Scheme code to load. It also treats the two
5586characters `#!' as the start of a comment, terminated by `!#'. Thus,
5587to make a file of Scheme code directly executable by Unix, insert the
5588following two lines at the top of the file:
5589
5590#!/usr/local/bin/guile -s
5591!#
5592
5593Guile treats the argument of the `-s' command-line switch as the name
5594of a file of Scheme code to load, and treats the sequence `#!' as the
5595start of a block comment, terminated by `!#'.
5596
5597For example, here's a version of 'echo' written in Scheme:
5598
5599#!/usr/local/bin/guile -s
5600!#
5601(let loop ((args (cdr (program-arguments))))
5602 (if (pair? args)
5603 (begin
5604 (display (car args))
5605 (if (pair? (cdr args))
5606 (display " "))
5607 (loop (cdr args)))))
5608(newline)
5609
5610Why does `#!' start a block comment terminated by `!#', instead of the
5611end of the line? That is the notation SCSH uses, and although we
5612don't yet support the other SCSH features that motivate that choice,
5613we would like to be backward-compatible with any existing Guile
3763761c
JB
5614scripts once we do. Furthermore, if the path to Guile on your system
5615is too long for your kernel, you can start the script with this
5616horrible hack:
5617
5618#!/bin/sh
5619exec /really/long/path/to/guile -s "$0" ${1+"$@"}
5620!#
3065a62a
JB
5621
5622Note that some very old Unix systems don't support the `#!' syntax.
5623
c6486f8a 5624
4b521edb 5625** You can now run Guile without installing it.
6685dc83
JB
5626
5627Previous versions of the interactive Guile interpreter (`guile')
5628couldn't start up unless Guile's Scheme library had been installed;
5629they used the value of the environment variable `SCHEME_LOAD_PATH'
5630later on in the startup process, but not to find the startup code
5631itself. Now Guile uses `SCHEME_LOAD_PATH' in all searches for Scheme
5632code.
5633
5634To run Guile without installing it, build it in the normal way, and
5635then set the environment variable `SCHEME_LOAD_PATH' to a
5636colon-separated list of directories, including the top-level directory
5637of the Guile sources. For example, if you unpacked Guile so that the
5638full filename of this NEWS file is /home/jimb/guile-1.0b3/NEWS, then
5639you might say
5640
5641 export SCHEME_LOAD_PATH=/home/jimb/my-scheme:/home/jimb/guile-1.0b3
5642
c6486f8a 5643
4b521edb
JB
5644** Guile's read-eval-print loop no longer prints #<unspecified>
5645results. If the user wants to see this, she can evaluate the
5646expression (assert-repl-print-unspecified #t), perhaps in her startup
48d224d7 5647file.
6685dc83 5648
4b521edb
JB
5649** Guile no longer shows backtraces by default when an error occurs;
5650however, it does display a message saying how to get one, and how to
5651request that they be displayed by default. After an error, evaluate
5652 (backtrace)
5653to see a backtrace, and
5654 (debug-enable 'backtrace)
5655to see them by default.
6685dc83 5656
6685dc83 5657
d9fb83d9 5658
4b521edb
JB
5659* Changes to Guile Scheme:
5660
5661** Guile now distinguishes between #f and the empty list.
5662
5663This is for compatibility with the IEEE standard, the (possibly)
5664upcoming Revised^5 Report on Scheme, and many extant Scheme
5665implementations.
5666
5667Guile used to have #f and '() denote the same object, to make Scheme's
5668type system more compatible with Emacs Lisp's. However, the change
5669caused too much trouble for Scheme programmers, and we found another
5670way to reconcile Emacs Lisp with Scheme that didn't require this.
5671
5672
5673** Guile's delq, delv, delete functions, and their destructive
c6486f8a
JB
5674counterparts, delq!, delv!, and delete!, now remove all matching
5675elements from the list, not just the first. This matches the behavior
5676of the corresponding Emacs Lisp functions, and (I believe) the Maclisp
5677functions which inspired them.
5678
5679I recognize that this change may break code in subtle ways, but it
5680seems best to make the change before the FSF's first Guile release,
5681rather than after.
5682
5683
4b521edb 5684** The compiled-library-path function has been deleted from libguile.
6685dc83 5685
4b521edb 5686** The facilities for loading Scheme source files have changed.
c6486f8a 5687
4b521edb 5688*** The variable %load-path now tells Guile which directories to search
6685dc83
JB
5689for Scheme code. Its value is a list of strings, each of which names
5690a directory.
5691
4b521edb
JB
5692*** The variable %load-extensions now tells Guile which extensions to
5693try appending to a filename when searching the load path. Its value
5694is a list of strings. Its default value is ("" ".scm").
5695
5696*** (%search-load-path FILENAME) searches the directories listed in the
5697value of the %load-path variable for a Scheme file named FILENAME,
5698with all the extensions listed in %load-extensions. If it finds a
5699match, then it returns its full filename. If FILENAME is absolute, it
5700returns it unchanged. Otherwise, it returns #f.
6685dc83 5701
4b521edb
JB
5702%search-load-path will not return matches that refer to directories.
5703
5704*** (primitive-load FILENAME :optional CASE-INSENSITIVE-P SHARP)
5705uses %seach-load-path to find a file named FILENAME, and loads it if
5706it finds it. If it can't read FILENAME for any reason, it throws an
5707error.
6685dc83
JB
5708
5709The arguments CASE-INSENSITIVE-P and SHARP are interpreted as by the
4b521edb
JB
5710`read' function.
5711
5712*** load uses the same searching semantics as primitive-load.
5713
5714*** The functions %try-load, try-load-with-path, %load, load-with-path,
5715basic-try-load-with-path, basic-load-with-path, try-load-module-with-
5716path, and load-module-with-path have been deleted. The functions
5717above should serve their purposes.
5718
5719*** If the value of the variable %load-hook is a procedure,
5720`primitive-load' applies its value to the name of the file being
5721loaded (without the load path directory name prepended). If its value
5722is #f, it is ignored. Otherwise, an error occurs.
5723
5724This is mostly useful for printing load notification messages.
5725
5726
5727** The function `eval!' is no longer accessible from the scheme level.
5728We can't allow operations which introduce glocs into the scheme level,
5729because Guile's type system can't handle these as data. Use `eval' or
5730`read-and-eval!' (see below) as replacement.
5731
5732** The new function read-and-eval! reads an expression from PORT,
5733evaluates it, and returns the result. This is more efficient than
5734simply calling `read' and `eval', since it is not necessary to make a
5735copy of the expression for the evaluator to munge.
5736
5737Its optional arguments CASE_INSENSITIVE_P and SHARP are interpreted as
5738for the `read' function.
5739
5740
5741** The function `int?' has been removed; its definition was identical
5742to that of `integer?'.
5743
5744** The functions `<?', `<?', `<=?', `=?', `>?', and `>=?'. Code should
5745use the R4RS names for these functions.
5746
5747** The function object-properties no longer returns the hash handle;
5748it simply returns the object's property list.
5749
5750** Many functions have been changed to throw errors, instead of
5751returning #f on failure. The point of providing exception handling in
5752the language is to simplify the logic of user code, but this is less
5753useful if Guile's primitives don't throw exceptions.
5754
5755** The function `fileno' has been renamed from `%fileno'.
5756
5757** The function primitive-mode->fdes returns #t or #f now, not 1 or 0.
5758
5759
5760* Changes to Guile's C interface:
5761
5762** The library's initialization procedure has been simplified.
5763scm_boot_guile now has the prototype:
5764
5765void scm_boot_guile (int ARGC,
5766 char **ARGV,
5767 void (*main_func) (),
5768 void *closure);
5769
5770scm_boot_guile calls MAIN_FUNC, passing it CLOSURE, ARGC, and ARGV.
5771MAIN_FUNC should do all the work of the program (initializing other
5772packages, reading user input, etc.) before returning. When MAIN_FUNC
5773returns, call exit (0); this function never returns. If you want some
5774other exit value, MAIN_FUNC may call exit itself.
5775
5776scm_boot_guile arranges for program-arguments to return the strings
5777given by ARGC and ARGV. If MAIN_FUNC modifies ARGC/ARGV, should call
5778scm_set_program_arguments with the final list, so Scheme code will
5779know which arguments have been processed.
5780
5781scm_boot_guile establishes a catch-all catch handler which prints an
5782error message and exits the process. This means that Guile exits in a
5783coherent way when system errors occur and the user isn't prepared to
5784handle it. If the user doesn't like this behavior, they can establish
5785their own universal catcher in MAIN_FUNC to shadow this one.
5786
5787Why must the caller do all the real work from MAIN_FUNC? The garbage
5788collector assumes that all local variables of type SCM will be above
5789scm_boot_guile's stack frame on the stack. If you try to manipulate
5790SCM values after this function returns, it's the luck of the draw
5791whether the GC will be able to find the objects you allocate. So,
5792scm_boot_guile function exits, rather than returning, to discourage
5793people from making that mistake.
5794
5795The IN, OUT, and ERR arguments were removed; there are other
5796convenient ways to override these when desired.
5797
5798The RESULT argument was deleted; this function should never return.
5799
5800The BOOT_CMD argument was deleted; the MAIN_FUNC argument is more
5801general.
5802
5803
5804** Guile's header files should no longer conflict with your system's
5805header files.
5806
5807In order to compile code which #included <libguile.h>, previous
5808versions of Guile required you to add a directory containing all the
5809Guile header files to your #include path. This was a problem, since
5810Guile's header files have names which conflict with many systems'
5811header files.
5812
5813Now only <libguile.h> need appear in your #include path; you must
5814refer to all Guile's other header files as <libguile/mumble.h>.
5815Guile's installation procedure puts libguile.h in $(includedir), and
5816the rest in $(includedir)/libguile.
5817
5818
5819** Two new C functions, scm_protect_object and scm_unprotect_object,
5820have been added to the Guile library.
5821
5822scm_protect_object (OBJ) protects OBJ from the garbage collector.
5823OBJ will not be freed, even if all other references are dropped,
5824until someone does scm_unprotect_object (OBJ). Both functions
5825return OBJ.
5826
5827Note that calls to scm_protect_object do not nest. You can call
5828scm_protect_object any number of times on a given object, and the
5829next call to scm_unprotect_object will unprotect it completely.
5830
5831Basically, scm_protect_object and scm_unprotect_object just
5832maintain a list of references to things. Since the GC knows about
5833this list, all objects it mentions stay alive. scm_protect_object
5834adds its argument to the list; scm_unprotect_object remove its
5835argument from the list.
5836
5837
5838** scm_eval_0str now returns the value of the last expression
5839evaluated.
5840
5841** The new function scm_read_0str reads an s-expression from a
5842null-terminated string, and returns it.
5843
5844** The new function `scm_stdio_to_port' converts a STDIO file pointer
5845to a Scheme port object.
5846
5847** The new function `scm_set_program_arguments' allows C code to set
e80c8fea 5848the value returned by the Scheme `program-arguments' function.
6685dc83 5849
6685dc83 5850\f
1a1945be
JB
5851Older changes:
5852
5853* Guile no longer includes sophisticated Tcl/Tk support.
5854
5855The old Tcl/Tk support was unsatisfying to us, because it required the
5856user to link against the Tcl library, as well as Tk and Guile. The
5857interface was also un-lispy, in that it preserved Tcl/Tk's practice of
5858referring to widgets by names, rather than exporting widgets to Scheme
5859code as a special datatype.
5860
5861In the Usenix Tk Developer's Workshop held in July 1996, the Tcl/Tk
5862maintainers described some very interesting changes in progress to the
5863Tcl/Tk internals, which would facilitate clean interfaces between lone
5864Tk and other interpreters --- even for garbage-collected languages
5865like Scheme. They expected the new Tk to be publicly available in the
5866fall of 1996.
5867
5868Since it seems that Guile might soon have a new, cleaner interface to
5869lone Tk, and that the old Guile/Tk glue code would probably need to be
5870completely rewritten, we (Jim Blandy and Richard Stallman) have
5871decided not to support the old code. We'll spend the time instead on
5872a good interface to the newer Tk, as soon as it is available.
5c54da76 5873
8512dea6 5874Until then, gtcltk-lib provides trivial, low-maintenance functionality.
deb95d71 5875
5c54da76
JB
5876\f
5877Copyright information:
5878
7e267da1 5879Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5c54da76
JB
5880
5881 Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies
5882 of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the
5883 copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved,
5884 thus giving the recipient permission to redistribute in turn.
5885
5886 Permission is granted to distribute modified versions
5887 of this document, or of portions of it,
5888 under the above conditions, provided also that they
5889 carry prominent notices stating who last changed them.
5890
48d224d7
JB
5891\f
5892Local variables:
5893mode: outline
5894paragraph-separate: "[ \f]*$"
5895end:
5896