Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/stable-2.0'
[bpt/guile.git] / module / ice-9 / match.upstream.scm
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b92bbfff 1;;;; match.scm -- portable hygienic pattern matcher -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
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2;;
3;; This code is written by Alex Shinn and placed in the
4;; Public Domain. All warranties are disclaimed.
5
5fcb7b3c 6;;> @example-import[(srfi 9)]
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8;;> This is a full superset of the popular @hyperlink[
9;;> "http://www.cs.indiana.edu/scheme-repository/code.match.html"]{match}
10;;> package by Andrew Wright, written in fully portable @scheme{syntax-rules}
11;;> and thus preserving hygiene.
12
13;;> The most notable extensions are the ability to use @emph{non-linear}
14;;> patterns - patterns in which the same identifier occurs multiple
15;;> times, tail patterns after ellipsis, and the experimental tree patterns.
16
17;;> @subsubsection{Patterns}
18
19;;> Patterns are written to look like the printed representation of
20;;> the objects they match. The basic usage is
21
22;;> @scheme{(match expr (pat body ...) ...)}
23
24;;> where the result of @var{expr} is matched against each pattern in
25;;> turn, and the corresponding body is evaluated for the first to
26;;> succeed. Thus, a list of three elements matches a list of three
27;;> elements.
28
29;;> @example{(let ((ls (list 1 2 3))) (match ls ((1 2 3) #t)))}
30
31;;> If no patterns match an error is signalled.
32
33;;> Identifiers will match anything, and make the corresponding
34;;> binding available in the body.
35
36;;> @example{(match (list 1 2 3) ((a b c) b))}
37
38;;> If the same identifier occurs multiple times, the first instance
39;;> will match anything, but subsequent instances must match a value
40;;> which is @scheme{equal?} to the first.
41
42;;> @example{(match (list 1 2 1) ((a a b) 1) ((a b a) 2))}
43
44;;> The special identifier @scheme{_} matches anything, no matter how
45;;> many times it is used, and does not bind the result in the body.
46
47;;> @example{(match (list 1 2 1) ((_ _ b) 1) ((a b a) 2))}
48
49;;> To match a literal identifier (or list or any other literal), use
50;;> @scheme{quote}.
51
52;;> @example{(match 'a ('b 1) ('a 2))}
53
54;;> Analogous to its normal usage in scheme, @scheme{quasiquote} can
55;;> be used to quote a mostly literally matching object with selected
56;;> parts unquoted.
57
58;;> @example|{(match (list 1 2 3) (`(1 ,b ,c) (list b c)))}|
59
60;;> Often you want to match any number of a repeated pattern. Inside
61;;> a list pattern you can append @scheme{...} after an element to
62;;> match zero or more of that pattern (like a regexp Kleene star).
63
64;;> @example{(match (list 1 2) ((1 2 3 ...) #t))}
65;;> @example{(match (list 1 2 3) ((1 2 3 ...) #t))}
66;;> @example{(match (list 1 2 3 3 3) ((1 2 3 ...) #t))}
67
68;;> Pattern variables matched inside the repeated pattern are bound to
69;;> a list of each matching instance in the body.
70
71;;> @example{(match (list 1 2) ((a b c ...) c))}
72;;> @example{(match (list 1 2 3) ((a b c ...) c))}
73;;> @example{(match (list 1 2 3 4 5) ((a b c ...) c))}
74
75;;> More than one @scheme{...} may not be used in the same list, since
76;;> this would require exponential backtracking in the general case.
77;;> However, @scheme{...} need not be the final element in the list,
78;;> and may be succeeded by a fixed number of patterns.
79
80;;> @example{(match (list 1 2 3 4) ((a b c ... d e) c))}
81;;> @example{(match (list 1 2 3 4 5) ((a b c ... d e) c))}
82;;> @example{(match (list 1 2 3 4 5 6 7) ((a b c ... d e) c))}
83
84;;> @scheme{___} is provided as an alias for @scheme{...} when it is
85;;> inconvenient to use the ellipsis (as in a syntax-rules template).
86
87;;> The @scheme{..1} syntax is exactly like the @scheme{...} except
88;;> that it matches one or more repetitions (like a regexp "+").
89
90;;> @example{(match (list 1 2) ((a b c ..1) c))}
91;;> @example{(match (list 1 2 3) ((a b c ..1) c))}
92
93;;> The boolean operators @scheme{and}, @scheme{or} and @scheme{not}
94;;> can be used to group and negate patterns analogously to their
95;;> Scheme counterparts.
96
97;;> The @scheme{and} operator ensures that all subpatterns match.
98;;> This operator is often used with the idiom @scheme{(and x pat)} to
99;;> bind @var{x} to the entire value that matches @var{pat}
100;;> (c.f. "as-patterns" in ML or Haskell). Another common use is in
101;;> conjunction with @scheme{not} patterns to match a general case
102;;> with certain exceptions.
103
104;;> @example{(match 1 ((and) #t))}
105;;> @example{(match 1 ((and x) x))}
106;;> @example{(match 1 ((and x 1) x))}
107
108;;> The @scheme{or} operator ensures that at least one subpattern
109;;> matches. If the same identifier occurs in different subpatterns,
110;;> it is matched independently. All identifiers from all subpatterns
111;;> are bound if the @scheme{or} operator matches, but the binding is
112;;> only defined for identifiers from the subpattern which matched.
113
114;;> @example{(match 1 ((or) #t) (else #f))}
115;;> @example{(match 1 ((or x) x))}
116;;> @example{(match 1 ((or x 2) x))}
117
118;;> The @scheme{not} operator succeeds if the given pattern doesn't
119;;> match. None of the identifiers used are available in the body.
120
121;;> @example{(match 1 ((not 2) #t))}
122
123;;> The more general operator @scheme{?} can be used to provide a
124;;> predicate. The usage is @scheme{(? predicate pat ...)} where
125;;> @var{predicate} is a Scheme expression evaluating to a predicate
126;;> called on the value to match, and any optional patterns after the
127;;> predicate are then matched as in an @scheme{and} pattern.
128
129;;> @example{(match 1 ((? odd? x) x))}
130
131;;> The field operator @scheme{=} is used to extract an arbitrary
132;;> field and match against it. It is useful for more complex or
133;;> conditional destructuring that can't be more directly expressed in
134;;> the pattern syntax. The usage is @scheme{(= field pat)}, where
135;;> @var{field} can be any expression, and should result in a
136;;> procedure of one argument, which is applied to the value to match
137;;> to generate a new value to match against @var{pat}.
138
139;;> Thus the pattern @scheme{(and (= car x) (= cdr y))} is equivalent
140;;> to @scheme{(x . y)}, except it will result in an immediate error
141;;> if the value isn't a pair.
142
143;;> @example{(match '(1 . 2) ((= car x) x))}
144;;> @example{(match 4 ((= sqrt x) x))}
145
146;;> The record operator @scheme{$} is used as a concise way to match
147;;> records defined by SRFI-9 (or SRFI-99). The usage is
148;;> @scheme{($ rtd field ...)}, where @var{rtd} should be the record
149;;> type descriptor specified as the first argument to
150;;> @scheme{define-record-type}, and each @var{field} is a subpattern
151;;> matched against the fields of the record in order. Not all fields
152;;> must be present.
153
154;;> @example{
155;;> (let ()
156;;> (define-record-type employee
157;;> (make-employee name title)
158;;> employee?
159;;> (name get-name)
160;;> (title get-title))
161;;> (match (make-employee "Bob" "Doctor")
162;;> (($ employee n t) (list t n))))
163;;> }
164
165;;> The @scheme{set!} and @scheme{get!} operators are used to bind an
166;;> identifier to the setter and getter of a field, respectively. The
167;;> setter is a procedure of one argument, which mutates the field to
168;;> that argument. The getter is a procedure of no arguments which
169;;> returns the current value of the field.
170
171;;> @example{(let ((x (cons 1 2))) (match x ((1 . (set! s)) (s 3) x)))}
172;;> @example{(match '(1 . 2) ((1 . (get! g)) (g)))}
173
174;;> The new operator @scheme{***} can be used to search a tree for
175;;> subpatterns. A pattern of the form @scheme{(x *** y)} represents
176;;> the subpattern @var{y} located somewhere in a tree where the path
177;;> from the current object to @var{y} can be seen as a list of the
178;;> form @scheme{(x ...)}. @var{y} can immediately match the current
179;;> object in which case the path is the empty list. In a sense it's
180;;> a 2-dimensional version of the @scheme{...} pattern.
181
182;;> As a common case the pattern @scheme{(_ *** y)} can be used to
183;;> search for @var{y} anywhere in a tree, regardless of the path
184;;> used.
185
186;;> @example{(match '(a (a (a b))) ((x *** 'b) x))}
187;;> @example{(match '(a (b) (c (d e) (f g))) ((x *** 'g) x))}
188
189;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
190;; Notes
191
192;; The implementation is a simple generative pattern matcher - each
193;; pattern is expanded into the required tests, calling a failure
194;; continuation if the tests fail. This makes the logic easy to
195;; follow and extend, but produces sub-optimal code in cases where you
196;; have many similar clauses due to repeating the same tests.
197;; Nonetheless a smart compiler should be able to remove the redundant
198;; tests. For MATCH-LET and DESTRUCTURING-BIND type uses there is no
199;; performance hit.
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200
201;; The original version was written on 2006/11/29 and described in the
202;; following Usenet post:
203;; http://groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.scheme/msg/0941234de7112ffd
204;; and is still available at
205;; http://synthcode.com/scheme/match-simple.scm
206;; It's just 80 lines for the core MATCH, and an extra 40 lines for
207;; MATCH-LET, MATCH-LAMBDA and other syntactic sugar.
208;;
209;; A variant of this file which uses COND-EXPAND in a few places for
210;; performance can be found at
211;; http://synthcode.com/scheme/match-cond-expand.scm
212;;
0a3ac81a 213;; 2012/05/23 - fixing combinatorial explosion of code in certain or patterns
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214;; 2011/09/25 - fixing bug when directly matching an identifier repeated in
215;; the pattern (thanks to Stefan Israelsson Tampe)
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216;; 2011/01/27 - fixing bug when matching tail patterns against improper lists
217;; 2010/09/26 - adding `..1' patterns (thanks to Ludovic Courtès)
218;; 2010/09/07 - fixing identifier extraction in some `...' and `***' patterns
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219;; 2009/11/25 - adding `***' tree search patterns
220;; 2008/03/20 - fixing bug where (a ...) matched non-lists
221;; 2008/03/15 - removing redundant check in vector patterns
222;; 2008/03/06 - you can use `...' portably now (thanks to Taylor Campbell)
223;; 2007/09/04 - fixing quasiquote patterns
224;; 2007/07/21 - allowing ellipse patterns in non-final list positions
225;; 2007/04/10 - fixing potential hygiene issue in match-check-ellipse
226;; (thanks to Taylor Campbell)
227;; 2007/04/08 - clean up, commenting
228;; 2006/12/24 - bugfixes
229;; 2006/12/01 - non-linear patterns, shared variables in OR, get!/set!
230
231;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
232;; force compile-time syntax errors with useful messages
233
234(define-syntax match-syntax-error
235 (syntax-rules ()
236 ((_) (match-syntax-error "invalid match-syntax-error usage"))))
237
238;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
239
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240;;> @subsubsection{Syntax}
241
242;;> @subsubsubsection{@rawcode{(match expr (pattern . body) ...)@br{}
243;;> (match expr (pattern (=> failure) . body) ...)}}
244
245;;> The result of @var{expr} is matched against each @var{pattern} in
246;;> turn, according to the pattern rules described in the previous
247;;> section, until the the first @var{pattern} matches. When a match is
248;;> found, the corresponding @var{body}s are evaluated in order,
249;;> and the result of the last expression is returned as the result
250;;> of the entire @scheme{match}. If a @var{failure} is provided,
251;;> then it is bound to a procedure of no arguments which continues,
252;;> processing at the next @var{pattern}. If no @var{pattern} matches,
253;;> an error is signalled.
254
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255;; The basic interface. MATCH just performs some basic syntax
256;; validation, binds the match expression to a temporary variable `v',
257;; and passes it on to MATCH-NEXT. It's a constant throughout the
258;; code below that the binding `v' is a direct variable reference, not
259;; an expression.
260
261(define-syntax match
262 (syntax-rules ()
263 ((match)
264 (match-syntax-error "missing match expression"))
265 ((match atom)
266 (match-syntax-error "no match clauses"))
267 ((match (app ...) (pat . body) ...)
268 (let ((v (app ...)))
269 (match-next v ((app ...) (set! (app ...))) (pat . body) ...)))
270 ((match #(vec ...) (pat . body) ...)
271 (let ((v #(vec ...)))
272 (match-next v (v (set! v)) (pat . body) ...)))
273 ((match atom (pat . body) ...)
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274 (let ((v atom))
275 (match-next v (atom (set! atom)) (pat . body) ...)))
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276 ))
277
278;; MATCH-NEXT passes each clause to MATCH-ONE in turn with its failure
279;; thunk, which is expanded by recursing MATCH-NEXT on the remaining
280;; clauses. `g+s' is a list of two elements, the get! and set!
281;; expressions respectively.
282
283(define-syntax match-next
284 (syntax-rules (=>)
285 ;; no more clauses, the match failed
286 ((match-next v g+s)
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287 ;; Here we wrap error within a double set of parentheses, so that
288 ;; the call to 'error' won't be in tail position. This allows the
289 ;; backtrace to show the source location of the failing match form.
290 ((error 'match "no matching pattern" v)))
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291 ;; named failure continuation
292 ((match-next v g+s (pat (=> failure) . body) . rest)
293 (let ((failure (lambda () (match-next v g+s . rest))))
294 ;; match-one analyzes the pattern for us
295 (match-one v pat g+s (match-drop-ids (begin . body)) (failure) ())))
296 ;; anonymous failure continuation, give it a dummy name
297 ((match-next v g+s (pat . body) . rest)
298 (match-next v g+s (pat (=> failure) . body) . rest))))
299
300;; MATCH-ONE first checks for ellipse patterns, otherwise passes on to
301;; MATCH-TWO.
302
303(define-syntax match-one
304 (syntax-rules ()
305 ;; If it's a list of two or more values, check to see if the
306 ;; second one is an ellipse and handle accordingly, otherwise go
307 ;; to MATCH-TWO.
308 ((match-one v (p q . r) g+s sk fk i)
309 (match-check-ellipse
310 q
311 (match-extract-vars p (match-gen-ellipses v p r g+s sk fk i) i ())
312 (match-two v (p q . r) g+s sk fk i)))
313 ;; Go directly to MATCH-TWO.
314 ((match-one . x)
315 (match-two . x))))
316
317;; This is the guts of the pattern matcher. We are passed a lot of
318;; information in the form:
319;;
320;; (match-two var pattern getter setter success-k fail-k (ids ...))
321;;
322;; usually abbreviated
323;;
324;; (match-two v p g+s sk fk i)
325;;
326;; where VAR is the symbol name of the current variable we are
327;; matching, PATTERN is the current pattern, getter and setter are the
328;; corresponding accessors (e.g. CAR and SET-CAR! of the pair holding
329;; VAR), SUCCESS-K is the success continuation, FAIL-K is the failure
330;; continuation (which is just a thunk call and is thus safe to expand
331;; multiple times) and IDS are the list of identifiers bound in the
332;; pattern so far.
333
334(define-syntax match-two
1ffed5aa 335 (syntax-rules (_ ___ ..1 *** quote quasiquote ? $ = and or not set! get!)
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336 ((match-two v () g+s (sk ...) fk i)
337 (if (null? v) (sk ... i) fk))
338 ((match-two v (quote p) g+s (sk ...) fk i)
339 (if (equal? v 'p) (sk ... i) fk))
340 ((match-two v (quasiquote p) . x)
341 (match-quasiquote v p . x))
342 ((match-two v (and) g+s (sk ...) fk i) (sk ... i))
343 ((match-two v (and p q ...) g+s sk fk i)
344 (match-one v p g+s (match-one v (and q ...) g+s sk fk) fk i))
345 ((match-two v (or) g+s sk fk i) fk)
346 ((match-two v (or p) . x)
347 (match-one v p . x))
348 ((match-two v (or p ...) g+s sk fk i)
349 (match-extract-vars (or p ...) (match-gen-or v (p ...) g+s sk fk i) i ()))
350 ((match-two v (not p) g+s (sk ...) fk i)
351 (match-one v p g+s (match-drop-ids fk) (sk ... i) i))
352 ((match-two v (get! getter) (g s) (sk ...) fk i)
353 (let ((getter (lambda () g))) (sk ... i)))
354 ((match-two v (set! setter) (g (s ...)) (sk ...) fk i)
355 (let ((setter (lambda (x) (s ... x)))) (sk ... i)))
356 ((match-two v (? pred . p) g+s sk fk i)
357 (if (pred v) (match-one v (and . p) g+s sk fk i) fk))
358 ((match-two v (= proc p) . x)
359 (let ((w (proc v))) (match-one w p . x)))
360 ((match-two v (p ___ . r) g+s sk fk i)
361 (match-extract-vars p (match-gen-ellipses v p r g+s sk fk i) i ()))
362 ((match-two v (p) g+s sk fk i)
363 (if (and (pair? v) (null? (cdr v)))
364 (let ((w (car v)))
365 (match-one w p ((car v) (set-car! v)) sk fk i))
366 fk))
367 ((match-two v (p *** q) g+s sk fk i)
368 (match-extract-vars p (match-gen-search v p q g+s sk fk i) i ()))
369 ((match-two v (p *** . q) g+s sk fk i)
370 (match-syntax-error "invalid use of ***" (p *** . q)))
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371 ((match-two v (p ..1) g+s sk fk i)
372 (if (pair? v)
373 (match-one v (p ___) g+s sk fk i)
374 fk))
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375 ((match-two v ($ rec p ...) g+s sk fk i)
376 (if (is-a? v rec)
377 (match-record-refs v rec 0 (p ...) g+s sk fk i)
378 fk))
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379 ((match-two v (p . q) g+s sk fk i)
380 (if (pair? v)
381 (let ((w (car v)) (x (cdr v)))
382 (match-one w p ((car v) (set-car! v))
383 (match-one x q ((cdr v) (set-cdr! v)) sk fk)
384 fk
385 i))
386 fk))
387 ((match-two v #(p ...) g+s . x)
388 (match-vector v 0 () (p ...) . x))
389 ((match-two v _ g+s (sk ...) fk i) (sk ... i))
390 ;; Not a pair or vector or special literal, test to see if it's a
391 ;; new symbol, in which case we just bind it, or if it's an
392 ;; already bound symbol or some other literal, in which case we
393 ;; compare it with EQUAL?.
394 ((match-two v x g+s (sk ...) fk (id ...))
395 (let-syntax
396 ((new-sym?
397 (syntax-rules (id ...)
398 ((new-sym? x sk2 fk2) sk2)
399 ((new-sym? y sk2 fk2) fk2))))
400 (new-sym? random-sym-to-match
401 (let ((x v)) (sk ... (id ... x)))
402 (if (equal? v x) (sk ... (id ...)) fk))))
403 ))
404
405;; QUASIQUOTE patterns
406
407(define-syntax match-quasiquote
408 (syntax-rules (unquote unquote-splicing quasiquote)
409 ((_ v (unquote p) g+s sk fk i)
410 (match-one v p g+s sk fk i))
411 ((_ v ((unquote-splicing p) . rest) g+s sk fk i)
412 (if (pair? v)
413 (match-one v
414 (p . tmp)
415 (match-quasiquote tmp rest g+s sk fk)
416 fk
417 i)
418 fk))
419 ((_ v (quasiquote p) g+s sk fk i . depth)
420 (match-quasiquote v p g+s sk fk i #f . depth))
421 ((_ v (unquote p) g+s sk fk i x . depth)
422 (match-quasiquote v p g+s sk fk i . depth))
423 ((_ v (unquote-splicing p) g+s sk fk i x . depth)
424 (match-quasiquote v p g+s sk fk i . depth))
425 ((_ v (p . q) g+s sk fk i . depth)
426 (if (pair? v)
427 (let ((w (car v)) (x (cdr v)))
428 (match-quasiquote
429 w p g+s
430 (match-quasiquote-step x q g+s sk fk depth)
431 fk i . depth))
432 fk))
433 ((_ v #(elt ...) g+s sk fk i . depth)
434 (if (vector? v)
435 (let ((ls (vector->list v)))
436 (match-quasiquote ls (elt ...) g+s sk fk i . depth))
437 fk))
438 ((_ v x g+s sk fk i . depth)
439 (match-one v 'x g+s sk fk i))))
440
441(define-syntax match-quasiquote-step
442 (syntax-rules ()
443 ((match-quasiquote-step x q g+s sk fk depth i)
444 (match-quasiquote x q g+s sk fk i . depth))))
445
446;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
447;; Utilities
448
449;; Takes two values and just expands into the first.
450(define-syntax match-drop-ids
451 (syntax-rules ()
452 ((_ expr ids ...) expr)))
453
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454(define-syntax match-tuck-ids
455 (syntax-rules ()
456 ((_ (letish args (expr ...)) ids ...)
457 (letish args (expr ... ids ...)))))
458
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459(define-syntax match-drop-first-arg
460 (syntax-rules ()
461 ((_ arg expr) expr)))
462
463;; To expand an OR group we try each clause in succession, passing the
464;; first that succeeds to the success continuation. On failure for
465;; any clause, we just try the next clause, finally resorting to the
466;; failure continuation fk if all clauses fail. The only trick is
467;; that we want to unify the identifiers, so that the success
468;; continuation can refer to a variable from any of the OR clauses.
469
470(define-syntax match-gen-or
471 (syntax-rules ()
472 ((_ v p g+s (sk ...) fk (i ...) ((id id-ls) ...))
473 (let ((sk2 (lambda (id ...) (sk ... (i ... id ...)))))
474 (match-gen-or-step v p g+s (match-drop-ids (sk2 id ...)) fk (i ...))))))
475
476(define-syntax match-gen-or-step
477 (syntax-rules ()
478 ((_ v () g+s sk fk . x)
479 ;; no OR clauses, call the failure continuation
480 fk)
481 ((_ v (p) . x)
482 ;; last (or only) OR clause, just expand normally
483 (match-one v p . x))
484 ((_ v (p . q) g+s sk fk i)
485 ;; match one and try the remaining on failure
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486 (let ((fk2 (lambda () (match-gen-or-step v q g+s sk fk i))))
487 (match-one v p g+s sk (fk2) i)))
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488 ))
489
490;; We match a pattern (p ...) by matching the pattern p in a loop on
491;; each element of the variable, accumulating the bound ids into lists.
492
493;; Look at the body of the simple case - it's just a named let loop,
494;; matching each element in turn to the same pattern. The only trick
495;; is that we want to keep track of the lists of each extracted id, so
496;; when the loop recurses we cons the ids onto their respective list
497;; variables, and on success we bind the ids (what the user input and
498;; expects to see in the success body) to the reversed accumulated
499;; list IDs.
500
501(define-syntax match-gen-ellipses
502 (syntax-rules ()
503 ((_ v p () g+s (sk ...) fk i ((id id-ls) ...))
504 (match-check-identifier p
505 ;; simplest case equivalent to (p ...), just bind the list
506 (let ((p v))
507 (if (list? p)
508 (sk ... i)
509 fk))
510 ;; simple case, match all elements of the list
511 (let loop ((ls v) (id-ls '()) ...)
512 (cond
513 ((null? ls)
514 (let ((id (reverse id-ls)) ...) (sk ... i)))
515 ((pair? ls)
516 (let ((w (car ls)))
517 (match-one w p ((car ls) (set-car! ls))
518 (match-drop-ids (loop (cdr ls) (cons id id-ls) ...))
519 fk i)))
520 (else
521 fk)))))
522 ((_ v p r g+s (sk ...) fk i ((id id-ls) ...))
523 ;; general case, trailing patterns to match, keep track of the
524 ;; remaining list length so we don't need any backtracking
525 (match-verify-no-ellipses
526 r
527 (let* ((tail-len (length 'r))
528 (ls v)
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529 (len (and (list? ls) (length ls))))
530 (if (or (not len) (< len tail-len))
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531 fk
532 (let loop ((ls ls) (n len) (id-ls '()) ...)
533 (cond
534 ((= n tail-len)
535 (let ((id (reverse id-ls)) ...)
5fcb7b3c 536 (match-one ls r (#f #f) (sk ...) fk i)))
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537 ((pair? ls)
538 (let ((w (car ls)))
539 (match-one w p ((car ls) (set-car! ls))
540 (match-drop-ids
541 (loop (cdr ls) (- n 1) (cons id id-ls) ...))
542 fk
543 i)))
544 (else
545 fk)))))))))
546
547;; This is just a safety check. Although unlike syntax-rules we allow
548;; trailing patterns after an ellipses, we explicitly disable multiple
549;; ellipses at the same level. This is because in the general case
550;; such patterns are exponential in the number of ellipses, and we
551;; don't want to make it easy to construct very expensive operations
552;; with simple looking patterns. For example, it would be O(n^2) for
553;; patterns like (a ... b ...) because we must consider every trailing
554;; element for every possible break for the leading "a ...".
555
556(define-syntax match-verify-no-ellipses
557 (syntax-rules ()
558 ((_ (x . y) sk)
559 (match-check-ellipse
560 x
561 (match-syntax-error
562 "multiple ellipse patterns not allowed at same level")
563 (match-verify-no-ellipses y sk)))
564 ((_ () sk)
565 sk)
566 ((_ x sk)
567 (match-syntax-error "dotted tail not allowed after ellipse" x))))
568
5fcb7b3c 569;; To implement the tree search, we use two recursive procedures. TRY
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570;; attempts to match Y once, and on success it calls the normal SK on
571;; the accumulated list ids as in MATCH-GEN-ELLIPSES. On failure, we
572;; call NEXT which first checks if the current value is a list
573;; beginning with X, then calls TRY on each remaining element of the
574;; list. Since TRY will recursively call NEXT again on failure, this
575;; effects a full depth-first search.
576;;
577;; The failure continuation throughout is a jump to the next step in
578;; the tree search, initialized with the original failure continuation
579;; FK.
580
581(define-syntax match-gen-search
582 (syntax-rules ()
583 ((match-gen-search v p q g+s sk fk i ((id id-ls) ...))
584 (letrec ((try (lambda (w fail id-ls ...)
585 (match-one w q g+s
5fcb7b3c 586 (match-tuck-ids
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587 (let ((id (reverse id-ls)) ...)
588 sk))
589 (next w fail id-ls ...) i)))
590 (next (lambda (w fail id-ls ...)
591 (if (not (pair? w))
592 (fail)
593 (let ((u (car w)))
594 (match-one
595 u p ((car w) (set-car! w))
596 (match-drop-ids
597 ;; accumulate the head variables from
598 ;; the p pattern, and loop over the tail
599 (let ((id-ls (cons id id-ls)) ...)
600 (let lp ((ls (cdr w)))
601 (if (pair? ls)
602 (try (car ls)
603 (lambda () (lp (cdr ls)))
604 id-ls ...)
605 (fail)))))
606 (fail) i))))))
607 ;; the initial id-ls binding here is a dummy to get the right
608 ;; number of '()s
609 (let ((id-ls '()) ...)
610 (try v (lambda () fk) id-ls ...))))))
611
612;; Vector patterns are just more of the same, with the slight
613;; exception that we pass around the current vector index being
614;; matched.
615
616(define-syntax match-vector
617 (syntax-rules (___)
618 ((_ v n pats (p q) . x)
619 (match-check-ellipse q
620 (match-gen-vector-ellipses v n pats p . x)
621 (match-vector-two v n pats (p q) . x)))
622 ((_ v n pats (p ___) sk fk i)
623 (match-gen-vector-ellipses v n pats p sk fk i))
624 ((_ . x)
625 (match-vector-two . x))))
626
627;; Check the exact vector length, then check each element in turn.
628
629(define-syntax match-vector-two
630 (syntax-rules ()
631 ((_ v n ((pat index) ...) () sk fk i)
632 (if (vector? v)
633 (let ((len (vector-length v)))
634 (if (= len n)
635 (match-vector-step v ((pat index) ...) sk fk i)
636 fk))
637 fk))
638 ((_ v n (pats ...) (p . q) . x)
639 (match-vector v (+ n 1) (pats ... (p n)) q . x))))
640
641(define-syntax match-vector-step
642 (syntax-rules ()
643 ((_ v () (sk ...) fk i) (sk ... i))
644 ((_ v ((pat index) . rest) sk fk i)
645 (let ((w (vector-ref v index)))
646 (match-one w pat ((vector-ref v index) (vector-set! v index))
647 (match-vector-step v rest sk fk)
648 fk i)))))
649
650;; With a vector ellipse pattern we first check to see if the vector
651;; length is at least the required length.
652
653(define-syntax match-gen-vector-ellipses
654 (syntax-rules ()
655 ((_ v n ((pat index) ...) p sk fk i)
656 (if (vector? v)
657 (let ((len (vector-length v)))
658 (if (>= len n)
659 (match-vector-step v ((pat index) ...)
660 (match-vector-tail v p n len sk fk)
661 fk i)
662 fk))
663 fk))))
664
665(define-syntax match-vector-tail
666 (syntax-rules ()
667 ((_ v p n len sk fk i)
668 (match-extract-vars p (match-vector-tail-two v p n len sk fk i) i ()))))
669
670(define-syntax match-vector-tail-two
671 (syntax-rules ()
672 ((_ v p n len (sk ...) fk i ((id id-ls) ...))
673 (let loop ((j n) (id-ls '()) ...)
674 (if (>= j len)
675 (let ((id (reverse id-ls)) ...) (sk ... i))
676 (let ((w (vector-ref v j)))
677 (match-one w p ((vector-ref v j) (vetor-set! v j))
678 (match-drop-ids (loop (+ j 1) (cons id id-ls) ...))
679 fk i)))))))
680
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681(define-syntax match-record-refs
682 (syntax-rules ()
683 ((_ v rec n (p . q) g+s sk fk i)
684 (let ((w (slot-ref rec v n)))
685 (match-one w p ((slot-ref rec v n) (slot-set! rec v n))
686 (match-record-refs v rec (+ n 1) q g+s sk fk) fk i)))
687 ((_ v rec n () g+s (sk ...) fk i)
688 (sk ... i))))
689
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690;; Extract all identifiers in a pattern. A little more complicated
691;; than just looking for symbols, we need to ignore special keywords
692;; and non-pattern forms (such as the predicate expression in ?
693;; patterns), and also ignore previously bound identifiers.
694;;
695;; Calls the continuation with all new vars as a list of the form
696;; ((orig-var tmp-name) ...), where tmp-name can be used to uniquely
697;; pair with the original variable (e.g. it's used in the ellipse
698;; generation for list variables).
699;;
700;; (match-extract-vars pattern continuation (ids ...) (new-vars ...))
701
702(define-syntax match-extract-vars
f2ee6341 703 (syntax-rules (_ ___ ..1 *** ? $ = quote quasiquote and or not get! set!)
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704 ((match-extract-vars (? pred . p) . x)
705 (match-extract-vars p . x))
706 ((match-extract-vars ($ rec . p) . x)
707 (match-extract-vars p . x))
708 ((match-extract-vars (= proc p) . x)
709 (match-extract-vars p . x))
710 ((match-extract-vars (quote x) (k ...) i v)
711 (k ... v))
712 ((match-extract-vars (quasiquote x) k i v)
713 (match-extract-quasiquote-vars x k i v (#t)))
714 ((match-extract-vars (and . p) . x)
715 (match-extract-vars p . x))
716 ((match-extract-vars (or . p) . x)
717 (match-extract-vars p . x))
718 ((match-extract-vars (not . p) . x)
719 (match-extract-vars p . x))
720 ;; A non-keyword pair, expand the CAR with a continuation to
721 ;; expand the CDR.
722 ((match-extract-vars (p q . r) k i v)
723 (match-check-ellipse
724 q
725 (match-extract-vars (p . r) k i v)
726 (match-extract-vars p (match-extract-vars-step (q . r) k i v) i ())))
727 ((match-extract-vars (p . q) k i v)
728 (match-extract-vars p (match-extract-vars-step q k i v) i ()))
729 ((match-extract-vars #(p ...) . x)
730 (match-extract-vars (p ...) . x))
731 ((match-extract-vars _ (k ...) i v) (k ... v))
732 ((match-extract-vars ___ (k ...) i v) (k ... v))
733 ((match-extract-vars *** (k ...) i v) (k ... v))
5fcb7b3c 734 ((match-extract-vars ..1 (k ...) i v) (k ... v))
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735 ;; This is the main part, the only place where we might add a new
736 ;; var if it's an unbound symbol.
737 ((match-extract-vars p (k ...) (i ...) v)
738 (let-syntax
739 ((new-sym?
740 (syntax-rules (i ...)
741 ((new-sym? p sk fk) sk)
5fcb7b3c 742 ((new-sym? any sk fk) fk))))
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743 (new-sym? random-sym-to-match
744 (k ... ((p p-ls) . v))
745 (k ... v))))
746 ))
747
748;; Stepper used in the above so it can expand the CAR and CDR
749;; separately.
750
751(define-syntax match-extract-vars-step
752 (syntax-rules ()
753 ((_ p k i v ((v2 v2-ls) ...))
754 (match-extract-vars p k (v2 ... . i) ((v2 v2-ls) ... . v)))
755 ))
756
757(define-syntax match-extract-quasiquote-vars
758 (syntax-rules (quasiquote unquote unquote-splicing)
759 ((match-extract-quasiquote-vars (quasiquote x) k i v d)
760 (match-extract-quasiquote-vars x k i v (#t . d)))
761 ((match-extract-quasiquote-vars (unquote-splicing x) k i v d)
762 (match-extract-quasiquote-vars (unquote x) k i v d))
763 ((match-extract-quasiquote-vars (unquote x) k i v (#t))
764 (match-extract-vars x k i v))
765 ((match-extract-quasiquote-vars (unquote x) k i v (#t . d))
766 (match-extract-quasiquote-vars x k i v d))
767 ((match-extract-quasiquote-vars (x . y) k i v (#t . d))
768 (match-extract-quasiquote-vars
769 x
770 (match-extract-quasiquote-vars-step y k i v d) i ()))
771 ((match-extract-quasiquote-vars #(x ...) k i v (#t . d))
772 (match-extract-quasiquote-vars (x ...) k i v d))
773 ((match-extract-quasiquote-vars x (k ...) i v (#t . d))
774 (k ... v))
775 ))
776
777(define-syntax match-extract-quasiquote-vars-step
778 (syntax-rules ()
779 ((_ x k i v d ((v2 v2-ls) ...))
780 (match-extract-quasiquote-vars x k (v2 ... . i) ((v2 v2-ls) ... . v) d))
781 ))
782
783
784;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
785;; Gimme some sugar baby.
786
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787;;> Shortcut for @scheme{lambda} + @scheme{match}. Creates a
788;;> procedure of one argument, and matches that argument against each
789;;> clause.
790
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791(define-syntax match-lambda
792 (syntax-rules ()
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793 ((_ (pattern . body) ...) (lambda (expr) (match expr (pattern . body) ...)))))
794
795;;> Similar to @scheme{match-lambda}. Creates a procedure of any
796;;> number of arguments, and matches the argument list against each
797;;> clause.
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798
799(define-syntax match-lambda*
800 (syntax-rules ()
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801 ((_ (pattern . body) ...) (lambda expr (match expr (pattern . body) ...)))))
802
803;;> Matches each var to the corresponding expression, and evaluates
804;;> the body with all match variables in scope. Raises an error if
805;;> any of the expressions fail to match. Syntax analogous to named
806;;> let can also be used for recursive functions which match on their
807;;> arguments as in @scheme{match-lambda*}.
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808
809(define-syntax match-let
810 (syntax-rules ()
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811 ((_ ((var value) ...) . body)
812 (match-let/helper let () () ((var value) ...) . body))
813 ((_ loop ((var init) ...) . body)
814 (match-named-let loop ((var init) ...) . body))))
815
816;;> Similar to @scheme{match-let}, but analogously to @scheme{letrec}
817;;> matches and binds the variables with all match variables in scope.
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818
819(define-syntax match-letrec
820 (syntax-rules ()
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821 ((_ ((var value) ...) . body)
822 (match-let/helper letrec () () ((var value) ...) . body))))
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823
824(define-syntax match-let/helper
825 (syntax-rules ()
826 ((_ let ((var expr) ...) () () . body)
827 (let ((var expr) ...) . body))
828 ((_ let ((var expr) ...) ((pat tmp) ...) () . body)
829 (let ((var expr) ...)
830 (match-let* ((pat tmp) ...)
831 . body)))
832 ((_ let (v ...) (p ...) (((a . b) expr) . rest) . body)
833 (match-let/helper
834 let (v ... (tmp expr)) (p ... ((a . b) tmp)) rest . body))
835 ((_ let (v ...) (p ...) ((#(a ...) expr) . rest) . body)
836 (match-let/helper
837 let (v ... (tmp expr)) (p ... (#(a ...) tmp)) rest . body))
838 ((_ let (v ...) (p ...) ((a expr) . rest) . body)
839 (match-let/helper let (v ... (a expr)) (p ...) rest . body))))
840
841(define-syntax match-named-let
842 (syntax-rules ()
843 ((_ loop ((pat expr var) ...) () . body)
844 (let loop ((var expr) ...)
845 (match-let ((pat var) ...)
846 . body)))
847 ((_ loop (v ...) ((pat expr) . rest) . body)
848 (match-named-let loop (v ... (pat expr tmp)) rest . body))))
849
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850;;> @subsubsubsection{@rawcode{(match-let* ((var value) ...) body ...)}}
851
852;;> Similar to @scheme{match-let}, but analogously to @scheme{let*}
853;;> matches and binds the variables in sequence, with preceding match
854;;> variables in scope.
855
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856(define-syntax match-let*
857 (syntax-rules ()
858 ((_ () . body)
859 (begin . body))
860 ((_ ((pat expr) . rest) . body)
861 (match expr (pat (match-let* rest . body))))))
862
863
864;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
865;; Otherwise COND-EXPANDed bits.
866
867;; This *should* work, but doesn't :(
868;; (define-syntax match-check-ellipse
869;; (syntax-rules (...)
870;; ((_ ... sk fk) sk)
871;; ((_ x sk fk) fk)))
872
873;; This is a little more complicated, and introduces a new let-syntax,
874;; but should work portably in any R[56]RS Scheme. Taylor Campbell
875;; originally came up with the idea.
876(define-syntax match-check-ellipse
877 (syntax-rules ()
878 ;; these two aren't necessary but provide fast-case failures
879 ((match-check-ellipse (a . b) success-k failure-k) failure-k)
880 ((match-check-ellipse #(a ...) success-k failure-k) failure-k)
881 ;; matching an atom
882 ((match-check-ellipse id success-k failure-k)
883 (let-syntax ((ellipse? (syntax-rules ()
884 ;; iff `id' is `...' here then this will
885 ;; match a list of any length
886 ((ellipse? (foo id) sk fk) sk)
887 ((ellipse? other sk fk) fk))))
888 ;; this list of three elements will only many the (foo id) list
889 ;; above if `id' is `...'
890 (ellipse? (a b c) success-k failure-k)))))
891
892
893;; This is portable but can be more efficient with non-portable
894;; extensions. This trick was originally discovered by Oleg Kiselyov.
895
896(define-syntax match-check-identifier
897 (syntax-rules ()
898 ;; fast-case failures, lists and vectors are not identifiers
899 ((_ (x . y) success-k failure-k) failure-k)
900 ((_ #(x ...) success-k failure-k) failure-k)
901 ;; x is an atom
902 ((_ x success-k failure-k)
903 (let-syntax
904 ((sym?
905 (syntax-rules ()
906 ;; if the symbol `abracadabra' matches x, then x is a
907 ;; symbol
908 ((sym? x sk fk) sk)
909 ;; otherwise x is a non-symbol datum
910 ((sym? y sk fk) fk))))
911 (sym? abracadabra success-k failure-k)))))