Implement SRFI 28: Basic Format Strings.
[bpt/guile.git] / doc / ref / srfi-modules.texi
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1@c -*-texinfo-*-
2@c This is part of the GNU Guile Reference Manual.
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3@c Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 2000-2004, 2006, 2007-2014
4@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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5@c See the file guile.texi for copying conditions.
6
a0e07ba4 7@node SRFI Support
3229f68b 8@section SRFI Support Modules
8742c48b 9@cindex SRFI
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10
11SRFI is an acronym for Scheme Request For Implementation. The SRFI
12documents define a lot of syntactic and procedure extensions to standard
13Scheme as defined in R5RS.
14
15Guile has support for a number of SRFIs. This chapter gives an overview
16over the available SRFIs and some usage hints. For complete
17documentation, design rationales and further examples, we advise you to
18get the relevant SRFI documents from the SRFI home page
4b4b1e0b 19@url{http://srfi.schemers.org/}.
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20
21@menu
22* About SRFI Usage:: What to know about Guile's SRFI support.
23* SRFI-0:: cond-expand
24* SRFI-1:: List library.
25* SRFI-2:: and-let*.
26* SRFI-4:: Homogeneous numeric vector datatypes.
27* SRFI-6:: Basic String Ports.
28* SRFI-8:: receive.
29* SRFI-9:: define-record-type.
30* SRFI-10:: Hash-Comma Reader Extension.
c010924a 31* SRFI-11:: let-values and let*-values.
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32* SRFI-13:: String library.
33* SRFI-14:: Character-set library.
34* SRFI-16:: case-lambda
35* SRFI-17:: Generalized set!
e68f492a 36* SRFI-18:: Multithreading support
bfc9c8e0 37* SRFI-19:: Time/Date library.
8e9af854 38* SRFI-23:: Error reporting
1de8c1ae 39* SRFI-26:: Specializing parameters
56ec46a7 40* SRFI-27:: Sources of Random Bits
cffa9bd6 41* SRFI-28:: Basic format strings.
620c8965 42* SRFI-30:: Nested multi-line block comments
8638c417 43* SRFI-31:: A special form `rec' for recursive evaluation
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44* SRFI-34:: Exception handling.
45* SRFI-35:: Conditions.
d4c38221 46* SRFI-37:: args-fold program argument processor
12708eeb 47* SRFI-38:: External Representation for Data With Shared Structure
eeadfda1 48* SRFI-39:: Parameter objects
50d08cd8 49* SRFI-41:: Streams.
fdc8fd46 50* SRFI-42:: Eager comprehensions
9060dc29 51* SRFI-43:: Vector Library.
f16a2007 52* SRFI-45:: Primitives for expressing iterative lazy algorithms
2d6a3144 53* SRFI-46:: Basic syntax-rules Extensions.
4ea9becb 54* SRFI-55:: Requiring Features.
8503beb8 55* SRFI-60:: Integers as bits.
43ed3b69 56* SRFI-61:: A more general `cond' clause
b306fae0 57* SRFI-62:: S-expression comments.
34e89877 58* SRFI-64:: A Scheme API for test suites.
8175a07e 59* SRFI-67:: Compare procedures
1317062f 60* SRFI-69:: Basic hash tables.
da81e75d 61* SRFI-87:: => in case clauses.
189681f5 62* SRFI-88:: Keyword objects.
922d417b 63* SRFI-98:: Accessing environment variables.
bf9eb54a 64* SRFI-105:: Curly-infix expressions.
3e2e4965 65* SRFI-111:: Boxes.
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66@end menu
67
68
69@node About SRFI Usage
3229f68b 70@subsection About SRFI Usage
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71
72@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
73
74SRFI support in Guile is currently implemented partly in the core
75library, and partly as add-on modules. That means that some SRFIs are
76automatically available when the interpreter is started, whereas the
77other SRFIs require you to use the appropriate support module
12991fed 78explicitly.
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79
80There are several reasons for this inconsistency. First, the feature
81checking syntactic form @code{cond-expand} (@pxref{SRFI-0}) must be
82available immediately, because it must be there when the user wants to
83check for the Scheme implementation, that is, before she can know that
84it is safe to use @code{use-modules} to load SRFI support modules. The
85second reason is that some features defined in SRFIs had been
86implemented in Guile before the developers started to add SRFI
8edab37f 87implementations as modules (for example SRFI-13 (@pxref{SRFI-13})). In
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88the future, it is possible that SRFIs in the core library might be
89factored out into separate modules, requiring explicit module loading
90when they are needed. So you should be prepared to have to use
8edab37f 91@code{use-modules} someday in the future to access SRFI-13 bindings. If
a0e07ba4 92you want, you can do that already. We have included the module
8edab37f 93@code{(srfi srfi-13)} in the distribution, which currently does nothing,
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94but ensures that you can write future-safe code.
95
96Generally, support for a specific SRFI is made available by using
97modules named @code{(srfi srfi-@var{number})}, where @var{number} is the
98number of the SRFI needed. Another possibility is to use the command
99line option @code{--use-srfi}, which will load the necessary modules
100automatically (@pxref{Invoking Guile}).
101
102
103@node SRFI-0
3229f68b 104@subsection SRFI-0 - cond-expand
8742c48b 105@cindex SRFI-0
a0e07ba4 106
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107This SRFI lets a portable Scheme program test for the presence of
108certain features, and adapt itself by using different blocks of code,
109or fail if the necessary features are not available. There's no
110module to load, this is in the Guile core.
a0e07ba4 111
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112A program designed only for Guile will generally not need this
113mechanism, such a program can of course directly use the various
114documented parts of Guile.
a0e07ba4 115
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116@deffn syntax cond-expand (feature body@dots{}) @dots{}
117Expand to the @var{body} of the first clause whose @var{feature}
118specification is satisfied. It is an error if no @var{feature} is
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119satisfied.
120
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121Features are symbols such as @code{srfi-1}, and a feature
122specification can use @code{and}, @code{or} and @code{not} forms to
123test combinations. The last clause can be an @code{else}, to be used
124if no other passes.
a0e07ba4 125
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126For example, define a private version of @code{alist-cons} if SRFI-1
127is not available.
a0e07ba4 128
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129@example
130(cond-expand (srfi-1
131 )
132 (else
133 (define (alist-cons key val alist)
134 (cons (cons key val) alist))))
135@end example
a0e07ba4 136
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137Or demand a certain set of SRFIs (list operations, string ports,
138@code{receive} and string operations), failing if they're not
139available.
a0e07ba4 140
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141@example
142(cond-expand ((and srfi-1 srfi-6 srfi-8 srfi-13)
143 ))
144@end example
145@end deffn
a0e07ba4 146
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147@noindent
148The Guile core has the following features,
149
150@example
151guile
60c8ad9e 152guile-2 ;; starting from Guile 2.x
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153r5rs
154srfi-0
155srfi-4
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156srfi-13
157srfi-14
61d50919 158srfi-16
edb6de0b 159srfi-23
61d50919 160srfi-30
edb6de0b 161srfi-39
2d6a3144 162srfi-46
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163srfi-55
164srfi-61
b306fae0 165srfi-62
da81e75d 166srfi-87
edb6de0b 167srfi-105
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168@end example
169
170Other SRFI feature symbols are defined once their code has been loaded
171with @code{use-modules}, since only then are their bindings available.
a0e07ba4 172
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173The @samp{--use-srfi} command line option (@pxref{Invoking Guile}) is
174a good way to load SRFIs to satisfy @code{cond-expand} when running a
175portable program.
a0e07ba4 176
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177Testing the @code{guile} feature allows a program to adapt itself to
178the Guile module system, but still run on other Scheme systems. For
179example the following demands SRFI-8 (@code{receive}), but also knows
180how to load it with the Guile mechanism.
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181
182@example
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183(cond-expand (srfi-8
184 )
185 (guile
186 (use-modules (srfi srfi-8))))
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187@end example
188
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189@cindex @code{guile-2} SRFI-0 feature
190@cindex portability between 2.0 and older versions
191Likewise, testing the @code{guile-2} feature allows code to be portable
192between Guile 2.0 and previous versions of Guile. For instance, it
193makes it possible to write code that accounts for Guile 2.0's compiler,
194yet be correctly interpreted on 1.8 and earlier versions:
195
196@example
197(cond-expand (guile-2 (eval-when (compile)
198 ;; This must be evaluated at compile time.
199 (fluid-set! current-reader my-reader)))
200 (guile
201 ;; Earlier versions of Guile do not have a
202 ;; separate compilation phase.
203 (fluid-set! current-reader my-reader)))
204@end example
205
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206It should be noted that @code{cond-expand} is separate from the
207@code{*features*} mechanism (@pxref{Feature Tracking}), feature
208symbols in one are unrelated to those in the other.
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209
210
211@node SRFI-1
3229f68b 212@subsection SRFI-1 - List library
8742c48b 213@cindex SRFI-1
7c2e18cd 214@cindex list
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215
216@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
217
218The list library defined in SRFI-1 contains a lot of useful list
219processing procedures for construction, examining, destructuring and
220manipulating lists and pairs.
221
222Since SRFI-1 also defines some procedures which are already contained
223in R5RS and thus are supported by the Guile core library, some list
224and pair procedures which appear in the SRFI-1 document may not appear
225in this section. So when looking for a particular list/pair
226processing procedure, you should also have a look at the sections
227@ref{Lists} and @ref{Pairs}.
228
229@menu
230* SRFI-1 Constructors:: Constructing new lists.
231* SRFI-1 Predicates:: Testing list for specific properties.
232* SRFI-1 Selectors:: Selecting elements from lists.
233* SRFI-1 Length Append etc:: Length calculation and list appending.
234* SRFI-1 Fold and Map:: Higher-order list processing.
235* SRFI-1 Filtering and Partitioning:: Filter lists based on predicates.
85a9b4ed 236* SRFI-1 Searching:: Search for elements.
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237* SRFI-1 Deleting:: Delete elements from lists.
238* SRFI-1 Association Lists:: Handle association lists.
239* SRFI-1 Set Operations:: Use lists for representing sets.
240@end menu
241
242@node SRFI-1 Constructors
3229f68b 243@subsubsection Constructors
7c2e18cd 244@cindex list constructor
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245
246@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
247
248New lists can be constructed by calling one of the following
249procedures.
250
8f85c0c6 251@deffn {Scheme Procedure} xcons d a
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252Like @code{cons}, but with interchanged arguments. Useful mostly when
253passed to higher-order procedures.
254@end deffn
255
8f85c0c6 256@deffn {Scheme Procedure} list-tabulate n init-proc
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257Return an @var{n}-element list, where each list element is produced by
258applying the procedure @var{init-proc} to the corresponding list
259index. The order in which @var{init-proc} is applied to the indices
260is not specified.
261@end deffn
262
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263@deffn {Scheme Procedure} list-copy lst
264Return a new list containing the elements of the list @var{lst}.
265
266This function differs from the core @code{list-copy} (@pxref{List
267Constructors}) in accepting improper lists too. And if @var{lst} is
268not a pair at all then it's treated as the final tail of an improper
269list and simply returned.
270@end deffn
271
8f85c0c6 272@deffn {Scheme Procedure} circular-list elt1 elt2 @dots{}
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273Return a circular list containing the given arguments @var{elt1}
274@var{elt2} @dots{}.
275@end deffn
276
8f85c0c6 277@deffn {Scheme Procedure} iota count [start step]
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278Return a list containing @var{count} numbers, starting from
279@var{start} and adding @var{step} each time. The default @var{start}
280is 0, the default @var{step} is 1. For example,
a0e07ba4 281
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282@example
283(iota 6) @result{} (0 1 2 3 4 5)
284(iota 4 2.5 -2) @result{} (2.5 0.5 -1.5 -3.5)
285@end example
a0e07ba4 286
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287This function takes its name from the corresponding primitive in the
288APL language.
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289@end deffn
290
291
292@node SRFI-1 Predicates
3229f68b 293@subsubsection Predicates
7c2e18cd 294@cindex list predicate
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295
296@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
297
298The procedures in this section test specific properties of lists.
299
8f85c0c6 300@deffn {Scheme Procedure} proper-list? obj
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301Return @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a proper list, or @code{#f}
302otherwise. This is the same as the core @code{list?} (@pxref{List
303Predicates}).
304
305A proper list is a list which ends with the empty list @code{()} in
306the usual way. The empty list @code{()} itself is a proper list too.
307
308@example
309(proper-list? '(1 2 3)) @result{} #t
310(proper-list? '()) @result{} #t
311@end example
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312@end deffn
313
8f85c0c6 314@deffn {Scheme Procedure} circular-list? obj
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315Return @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a circular list, or @code{#f}
316otherwise.
317
318A circular list is a list where at some point the @code{cdr} refers
319back to a previous pair in the list (either the start or some later
320point), so that following the @code{cdr}s takes you around in a
321circle, with no end.
322
323@example
324(define x (list 1 2 3 4))
325(set-cdr! (last-pair x) (cddr x))
326x @result{} (1 2 3 4 3 4 3 4 ...)
327(circular-list? x) @result{} #t
328@end example
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329@end deffn
330
8f85c0c6 331@deffn {Scheme Procedure} dotted-list? obj
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332Return @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a dotted list, or @code{#f}
333otherwise.
334
335A dotted list is a list where the @code{cdr} of the last pair is not
336the empty list @code{()}. Any non-pair @var{obj} is also considered a
337dotted list, with length zero.
338
339@example
340(dotted-list? '(1 2 . 3)) @result{} #t
341(dotted-list? 99) @result{} #t
342@end example
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343@end deffn
344
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345It will be noted that any Scheme object passes exactly one of the
346above three tests @code{proper-list?}, @code{circular-list?} and
347@code{dotted-list?}. Non-lists are @code{dotted-list?}, finite lists
348are either @code{proper-list?} or @code{dotted-list?}, and infinite
349lists are @code{circular-list?}.
350
351@sp 1
8f85c0c6 352@deffn {Scheme Procedure} null-list? lst
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353Return @code{#t} if @var{lst} is the empty list @code{()}, @code{#f}
354otherwise. If something else than a proper or circular list is passed
85a9b4ed 355as @var{lst}, an error is signalled. This procedure is recommended
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356for checking for the end of a list in contexts where dotted lists are
357not allowed.
358@end deffn
359
8f85c0c6 360@deffn {Scheme Procedure} not-pair? obj
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361Return @code{#t} is @var{obj} is not a pair, @code{#f} otherwise.
362This is shorthand notation @code{(not (pair? @var{obj}))} and is
363supposed to be used for end-of-list checking in contexts where dotted
364lists are allowed.
365@end deffn
366
8f85c0c6 367@deffn {Scheme Procedure} list= elt= list1 @dots{}
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368Return @code{#t} if all argument lists are equal, @code{#f} otherwise.
369List equality is determined by testing whether all lists have the same
370length and the corresponding elements are equal in the sense of the
371equality predicate @var{elt=}. If no or only one list is given,
372@code{#t} is returned.
373@end deffn
374
375
376@node SRFI-1 Selectors
3229f68b 377@subsubsection Selectors
7c2e18cd 378@cindex list selector
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379
380@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
381
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382@deffn {Scheme Procedure} first pair
383@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} second pair
384@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} third pair
385@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} fourth pair
386@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} fifth pair
387@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} sixth pair
388@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} seventh pair
389@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} eighth pair
390@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} ninth pair
391@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} tenth pair
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392These are synonyms for @code{car}, @code{cadr}, @code{caddr}, @dots{}.
393@end deffn
394
8f85c0c6 395@deffn {Scheme Procedure} car+cdr pair
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396Return two values, the @sc{car} and the @sc{cdr} of @var{pair}.
397@end deffn
398
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399@deffn {Scheme Procedure} take lst i
400@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} take! lst i
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401Return a list containing the first @var{i} elements of @var{lst}.
402
403@code{take!} may modify the structure of the argument list @var{lst}
404in order to produce the result.
405@end deffn
406
8f85c0c6 407@deffn {Scheme Procedure} drop lst i
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408Return a list containing all but the first @var{i} elements of
409@var{lst}.
410@end deffn
411
8f85c0c6 412@deffn {Scheme Procedure} take-right lst i
ecb87335 413Return a list containing the @var{i} last elements of @var{lst}.
64bf8517 414The return shares a common tail with @var{lst}.
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415@end deffn
416
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417@deffn {Scheme Procedure} drop-right lst i
418@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} drop-right! lst i
ecb87335 419Return a list containing all but the @var{i} last elements of
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420@var{lst}.
421
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422@code{drop-right} always returns a new list, even when @var{i} is
423zero. @code{drop-right!} may modify the structure of the argument
424list @var{lst} in order to produce the result.
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425@end deffn
426
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427@deffn {Scheme Procedure} split-at lst i
428@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} split-at! lst i
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429Return two values, a list containing the first @var{i} elements of the
430list @var{lst} and a list containing the remaining elements.
431
432@code{split-at!} may modify the structure of the argument list
433@var{lst} in order to produce the result.
434@end deffn
435
8f85c0c6 436@deffn {Scheme Procedure} last lst
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437Return the last element of the non-empty, finite list @var{lst}.
438@end deffn
439
440
441@node SRFI-1 Length Append etc
3229f68b 442@subsubsection Length, Append, Concatenate, etc.
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443
444@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
445
8f85c0c6 446@deffn {Scheme Procedure} length+ lst
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447Return the length of the argument list @var{lst}. When @var{lst} is a
448circular list, @code{#f} is returned.
449@end deffn
450
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451@deffn {Scheme Procedure} concatenate list-of-lists
452@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} concatenate! list-of-lists
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453Construct a list by appending all lists in @var{list-of-lists}.
454
455@code{concatenate!} may modify the structure of the given lists in
456order to produce the result.
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457
458@code{concatenate} is the same as @code{(apply append
459@var{list-of-lists})}. It exists because some Scheme implementations
460have a limit on the number of arguments a function takes, which the
461@code{apply} might exceed. In Guile there is no such limit.
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462@end deffn
463
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464@deffn {Scheme Procedure} append-reverse rev-head tail
465@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} append-reverse! rev-head tail
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466Reverse @var{rev-head}, append @var{tail} to it, and return the
467result. This is equivalent to @code{(append (reverse @var{rev-head})
468@var{tail})}, but its implementation is more efficient.
469
470@example
471(append-reverse '(1 2 3) '(4 5 6)) @result{} (3 2 1 4 5 6)
472@end example
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473
474@code{append-reverse!} may modify @var{rev-head} in order to produce
475the result.
476@end deffn
477
8f85c0c6 478@deffn {Scheme Procedure} zip lst1 lst2 @dots{}
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479Return a list as long as the shortest of the argument lists, where
480each element is a list. The first list contains the first elements of
481the argument lists, the second list contains the second elements, and
482so on.
483@end deffn
484
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485@deffn {Scheme Procedure} unzip1 lst
486@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} unzip2 lst
487@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} unzip3 lst
488@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} unzip4 lst
489@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} unzip5 lst
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490@code{unzip1} takes a list of lists, and returns a list containing the
491first elements of each list, @code{unzip2} returns two lists, the
492first containing the first elements of each lists and the second
493containing the second elements of each lists, and so on.
494@end deffn
495
df0a1002 496@deffn {Scheme Procedure} count pred lst1 lst2 @dots{}
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497Return a count of the number of times @var{pred} returns true when
498called on elements from the given lists.
499
500@var{pred} is called with @var{N} parameters @code{(@var{pred}
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501@var{elem1} @dots{} @var{elemN} )}, each element being from the
502corresponding list. The first call is with the first element of each
503list, the second with the second element from each, and so on.
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504
505Counting stops when the end of the shortest list is reached. At least
506one list must be non-circular.
507@end deffn
508
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509
510@node SRFI-1 Fold and Map
3229f68b 511@subsubsection Fold, Unfold & Map
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512@cindex list fold
513@cindex list map
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514
515@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
516
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517@deffn {Scheme Procedure} fold proc init lst1 lst2 @dots{}
518@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} fold-right proc init lst1 lst2 @dots{}
519Apply @var{proc} to the elements of @var{lst1} @var{lst2} @dots{} to
1e181a08 520build a result, and return that result.
a0e07ba4 521
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522Each @var{proc} call is @code{(@var{proc} @var{elem1} @var{elem2}
523@dots{} @var{previous})}, where @var{elem1} is from @var{lst1},
524@var{elem2} is from @var{lst2}, and so on. @var{previous} is the return
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525from the previous call to @var{proc}, or the given @var{init} for the
526first call. If any list is empty, just @var{init} is returned.
a0e07ba4 527
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528@code{fold} works through the list elements from first to last. The
529following shows a list reversal and the calls it makes,
a0e07ba4 530
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531@example
532(fold cons '() '(1 2 3))
a0e07ba4 533
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534(cons 1 '())
535(cons 2 '(1))
536(cons 3 '(2 1)
537@result{} (3 2 1)
538@end example
a0e07ba4 539
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540@code{fold-right} works through the list elements from last to first,
541ie.@: from the right. So for example the following finds the longest
542string, and the last among equal longest,
543
544@example
545(fold-right (lambda (str prev)
546 (if (> (string-length str) (string-length prev))
547 str
548 prev))
549 ""
550 '("x" "abc" "xyz" "jk"))
551@result{} "xyz"
552@end example
a0e07ba4 553
df0a1002 554If @var{lst1} @var{lst2} @dots{} have different lengths, @code{fold}
1e181a08 555stops when the end of the shortest is reached; @code{fold-right}
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556commences at the last element of the shortest. Ie.@: elements past the
557length of the shortest are ignored in the other @var{lst}s. At least
558one @var{lst} must be non-circular.
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559
560@code{fold} should be preferred over @code{fold-right} if the order of
561processing doesn't matter, or can be arranged either way, since
562@code{fold} is a little more efficient.
563
564The way @code{fold} builds a result from iterating is quite general,
565it can do more than other iterations like say @code{map} or
566@code{filter}. The following for example removes adjacent duplicate
567elements from a list,
568
569@example
570(define (delete-adjacent-duplicates lst)
571 (fold-right (lambda (elem ret)
572 (if (equal? elem (first ret))
573 ret
574 (cons elem ret)))
575 (list (last lst))
576 lst))
577(delete-adjacent-duplicates '(1 2 3 3 4 4 4 5))
578@result{} (1 2 3 4 5)
579@end example
580
581Clearly the same sort of thing can be done with a @code{for-each} and
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582a variable in which to build the result, but a self-contained
583@var{proc} can be re-used in multiple contexts, where a
584@code{for-each} would have to be written out each time.
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585@end deffn
586
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587@deffn {Scheme Procedure} pair-fold proc init lst1 lst2 @dots{}
588@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} pair-fold-right proc init lst1 lst2 @dots{}
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589The same as @code{fold} and @code{fold-right}, but apply @var{proc} to
590the pairs of the lists instead of the list elements.
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591@end deffn
592
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593@deffn {Scheme Procedure} reduce proc default lst
594@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} reduce-right proc default lst
595@code{reduce} is a variant of @code{fold}, where the first call to
596@var{proc} is on two elements from @var{lst}, rather than one element
597and a given initial value.
1e181a08 598
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599If @var{lst} is empty, @code{reduce} returns @var{default} (this is
600the only use for @var{default}). If @var{lst} has just one element
601then that's the return value. Otherwise @var{proc} is called on the
602elements of @var{lst}.
1e181a08 603
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604Each @var{proc} call is @code{(@var{proc} @var{elem} @var{previous})},
605where @var{elem} is from @var{lst} (the second and subsequent elements
606of @var{lst}), and @var{previous} is the return from the previous call
607to @var{proc}. The first element of @var{lst} is the @var{previous}
608for the first call to @var{proc}.
1e181a08 609
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610For example, the following adds a list of numbers, the calls made to
611@code{+} are shown. (Of course @code{+} accepts multiple arguments
612and can add a list directly, with @code{apply}.)
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613
614@example
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615(reduce + 0 '(5 6 7)) @result{} 18
616
617(+ 6 5) @result{} 11
618(+ 7 11) @result{} 18
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619@end example
620
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621@code{reduce} can be used instead of @code{fold} where the @var{init}
622value is an ``identity'', meaning a value which under @var{proc}
623doesn't change the result, in this case 0 is an identity since
624@code{(+ 5 0)} is just 5. @code{reduce} avoids that unnecessary call.
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625
626@code{reduce-right} is a similar variation on @code{fold-right},
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627working from the end (ie.@: the right) of @var{lst}. The last element
628of @var{lst} is the @var{previous} for the first call to @var{proc},
629and the @var{elem} values go from the second last.
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630
631@code{reduce} should be preferred over @code{reduce-right} if the
632order of processing doesn't matter, or can be arranged either way,
633since @code{reduce} is a little more efficient.
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634@end deffn
635
8f85c0c6 636@deffn {Scheme Procedure} unfold p f g seed [tail-gen]
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637@code{unfold} is defined as follows:
638
639@lisp
640(unfold p f g seed) =
641 (if (p seed) (tail-gen seed)
642 (cons (f seed)
643 (unfold p f g (g seed))))
644@end lisp
645
646@table @var
647@item p
648Determines when to stop unfolding.
649
650@item f
651Maps each seed value to the corresponding list element.
652
653@item g
ecb87335 654Maps each seed value to next seed value.
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655
656@item seed
657The state value for the unfold.
658
659@item tail-gen
660Creates the tail of the list; defaults to @code{(lambda (x) '())}.
661@end table
662
663@var{g} produces a series of seed values, which are mapped to list
664elements by @var{f}. These elements are put into a list in
665left-to-right order, and @var{p} tells when to stop unfolding.
666@end deffn
667
8f85c0c6 668@deffn {Scheme Procedure} unfold-right p f g seed [tail]
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669Construct a list with the following loop.
670
671@lisp
672(let lp ((seed seed) (lis tail))
673 (if (p seed) lis
674 (lp (g seed)
675 (cons (f seed) lis))))
676@end lisp
677
678@table @var
679@item p
680Determines when to stop unfolding.
681
682@item f
683Maps each seed value to the corresponding list element.
684
685@item g
ecb87335 686Maps each seed value to next seed value.
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687
688@item seed
689The state value for the unfold.
690
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691@item tail
692The tail of the list; defaults to @code{'()}.
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693@end table
694
695@end deffn
696
8f85c0c6 697@deffn {Scheme Procedure} map f lst1 lst2 @dots{}
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698Map the procedure over the list(s) @var{lst1}, @var{lst2}, @dots{} and
699return a list containing the results of the procedure applications.
700This procedure is extended with respect to R5RS, because the argument
701lists may have different lengths. The result list will have the same
702length as the shortest argument lists. The order in which @var{f}
703will be applied to the list element(s) is not specified.
704@end deffn
705
8f85c0c6 706@deffn {Scheme Procedure} for-each f lst1 lst2 @dots{}
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707Apply the procedure @var{f} to each pair of corresponding elements of
708the list(s) @var{lst1}, @var{lst2}, @dots{}. The return value is not
709specified. This procedure is extended with respect to R5RS, because
710the argument lists may have different lengths. The shortest argument
711list determines the number of times @var{f} is called. @var{f} will
85a9b4ed 712be applied to the list elements in left-to-right order.
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713
714@end deffn
715
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716@deffn {Scheme Procedure} append-map f lst1 lst2 @dots{}
717@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} append-map! f lst1 lst2 @dots{}
12991fed 718Equivalent to
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719
720@lisp
12991fed 721(apply append (map f clist1 clist2 ...))
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722@end lisp
723
12991fed 724and
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725
726@lisp
12991fed 727(apply append! (map f clist1 clist2 ...))
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728@end lisp
729
730Map @var{f} over the elements of the lists, just as in the @code{map}
731function. However, the results of the applications are appended
732together to make the final result. @code{append-map} uses
733@code{append} to append the results together; @code{append-map!} uses
734@code{append!}.
735
736The dynamic order in which the various applications of @var{f} are
737made is not specified.
738@end deffn
739
8f85c0c6 740@deffn {Scheme Procedure} map! f lst1 lst2 @dots{}
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741Linear-update variant of @code{map} -- @code{map!} is allowed, but not
742required, to alter the cons cells of @var{lst1} to construct the
743result list.
744
745The dynamic order in which the various applications of @var{f} are
746made is not specified. In the n-ary case, @var{lst2}, @var{lst3},
747@dots{} must have at least as many elements as @var{lst1}.
748@end deffn
749
8f85c0c6 750@deffn {Scheme Procedure} pair-for-each f lst1 lst2 @dots{}
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751Like @code{for-each}, but applies the procedure @var{f} to the pairs
752from which the argument lists are constructed, instead of the list
753elements. The return value is not specified.
754@end deffn
755
8f85c0c6 756@deffn {Scheme Procedure} filter-map f lst1 lst2 @dots{}
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757Like @code{map}, but only results from the applications of @var{f}
758which are true are saved in the result list.
759@end deffn
760
761
762@node SRFI-1 Filtering and Partitioning
3229f68b 763@subsubsection Filtering and Partitioning
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764@cindex list filter
765@cindex list partition
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766
767@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
768
769Filtering means to collect all elements from a list which satisfy a
770specific condition. Partitioning a list means to make two groups of
771list elements, one which contains the elements satisfying a condition,
772and the other for the elements which don't.
773
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774The @code{filter} and @code{filter!} functions are implemented in the
775Guile core, @xref{List Modification}.
a0e07ba4 776
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777@deffn {Scheme Procedure} partition pred lst
778@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} partition! pred lst
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779Split @var{lst} into those elements which do and don't satisfy the
780predicate @var{pred}.
a0e07ba4 781
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782The return is two values (@pxref{Multiple Values}), the first being a
783list of all elements from @var{lst} which satisfy @var{pred}, the
784second a list of those which do not.
785
786The elements in the result lists are in the same order as in @var{lst}
787but the order in which the calls @code{(@var{pred} elem)} are made on
788the list elements is unspecified.
789
790@code{partition} does not change @var{lst}, but one of the returned
791lists may share a tail with it. @code{partition!} may modify
792@var{lst} to construct its return.
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793@end deffn
794
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795@deffn {Scheme Procedure} remove pred lst
796@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} remove! pred lst
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797Return a list containing all elements from @var{lst} which do not
798satisfy the predicate @var{pred}. The elements in the result list
799have the same order as in @var{lst}. The order in which @var{pred} is
800applied to the list elements is not specified.
801
802@code{remove!} is allowed, but not required to modify the structure of
803the input list.
804@end deffn
805
806
807@node SRFI-1 Searching
3229f68b 808@subsubsection Searching
7c2e18cd 809@cindex list search
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810
811@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
812
813The procedures for searching elements in lists either accept a
814predicate or a comparison object for determining which elements are to
815be searched.
816
8f85c0c6 817@deffn {Scheme Procedure} find pred lst
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818Return the first element of @var{lst} which satisfies the predicate
819@var{pred} and @code{#f} if no such element is found.
820@end deffn
821
8f85c0c6 822@deffn {Scheme Procedure} find-tail pred lst
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823Return the first pair of @var{lst} whose @sc{car} satisfies the
824predicate @var{pred} and @code{#f} if no such element is found.
825@end deffn
826
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827@deffn {Scheme Procedure} take-while pred lst
828@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} take-while! pred lst
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829Return the longest initial prefix of @var{lst} whose elements all
830satisfy the predicate @var{pred}.
831
832@code{take-while!} is allowed, but not required to modify the input
833list while producing the result.
834@end deffn
835
8f85c0c6 836@deffn {Scheme Procedure} drop-while pred lst
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837Drop the longest initial prefix of @var{lst} whose elements all
838satisfy the predicate @var{pred}.
839@end deffn
840
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841@deffn {Scheme Procedure} span pred lst
842@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} span! pred lst
843@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} break pred lst
844@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} break! pred lst
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845@code{span} splits the list @var{lst} into the longest initial prefix
846whose elements all satisfy the predicate @var{pred}, and the remaining
847tail. @code{break} inverts the sense of the predicate.
848
849@code{span!} and @code{break!} are allowed, but not required to modify
850the structure of the input list @var{lst} in order to produce the
851result.
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852
853Note that the name @code{break} conflicts with the @code{break}
854binding established by @code{while} (@pxref{while do}). Applications
855wanting to use @code{break} from within a @code{while} loop will need
856to make a new define under a different name.
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857@end deffn
858
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859@deffn {Scheme Procedure} any pred lst1 lst2 @dots{}
860Test whether any set of elements from @var{lst1} @var{lst2} @dots{}
861satisfies @var{pred}. If so, the return value is the return value from
862the successful @var{pred} call, or if not, the return value is
863@code{#f}.
62705beb 864
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865If there are n list arguments, then @var{pred} must be a predicate
866taking n arguments. Each @var{pred} call is @code{(@var{pred}
867@var{elem1} @var{elem2} @dots{} )} taking an element from each
868@var{lst}. The calls are made successively for the first, second, etc.
869elements of the lists, stopping when @var{pred} returns non-@code{#f},
870or when the end of the shortest list is reached.
62705beb 871
df0a1002 872The @var{pred} call on the last set of elements (i.e., when the end of
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873the shortest list has been reached), if that point is reached, is a
874tail call.
875@end deffn
876
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877@deffn {Scheme Procedure} every pred lst1 lst2 @dots{}
878Test whether every set of elements from @var{lst1} @var{lst2} @dots{}
879satisfies @var{pred}. If so, the return value is the return from the
880final @var{pred} call, or if not, the return value is @code{#f}.
62705beb 881
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882If there are n list arguments, then @var{pred} must be a predicate
883taking n arguments. Each @var{pred} call is @code{(@var{pred}
884@var{elem1} @var{elem2 @dots{}})} taking an element from each
885@var{lst}. The calls are made successively for the first, second, etc.
886elements of the lists, stopping if @var{pred} returns @code{#f}, or when
887the end of any of the lists is reached.
62705beb 888
df0a1002 889The @var{pred} call on the last set of elements (i.e., when the end of
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890the shortest list has been reached) is a tail call.
891
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892If one of @var{lst1} @var{lst2} @dots{}is empty then no calls to
893@var{pred} are made, and the return value is @code{#t}.
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894@end deffn
895
df0a1002 896@deffn {Scheme Procedure} list-index pred lst1 lst2 @dots{}
d1736abf 897Return the index of the first set of elements, one from each of
df0a1002 898@var{lst1} @var{lst2} @dots{}, which satisfies @var{pred}.
d1736abf 899
df0a1002 900@var{pred} is called as @code{(@var{elem1} @var{elem2 @dots{}})}.
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901Searching stops when the end of the shortest @var{lst} is reached.
902The return index starts from 0 for the first set of elements. If no
df0a1002 903set of elements pass, then the return value is @code{#f}.
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904
905@example
906(list-index odd? '(2 4 6 9)) @result{} 3
907(list-index = '(1 2 3) '(3 1 2)) @result{} #f
908@end example
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909@end deffn
910
8f85c0c6 911@deffn {Scheme Procedure} member x lst [=]
a0e07ba4 912Return the first sublist of @var{lst} whose @sc{car} is equal to
ca04a5ae 913@var{x}. If @var{x} does not appear in @var{lst}, return @code{#f}.
ea6ea01b 914
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915Equality is determined by @code{equal?}, or by the equality predicate
916@var{=} if given. @var{=} is called @code{(= @var{x} elem)},
917ie.@: with the given @var{x} first, so for example to find the first
918element greater than 5,
919
920@example
921(member 5 '(3 5 1 7 2 9) <) @result{} (7 2 9)
922@end example
923
924This version of @code{member} extends the core @code{member}
925(@pxref{List Searching}) by accepting an equality predicate.
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926@end deffn
927
928
929@node SRFI-1 Deleting
3229f68b 930@subsubsection Deleting
7c2e18cd 931@cindex list delete
a0e07ba4 932
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933@deffn {Scheme Procedure} delete x lst [=]
934@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} delete! x lst [=]
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935Return a list containing the elements of @var{lst} but with those
936equal to @var{x} deleted. The returned elements will be in the same
937order as they were in @var{lst}.
938
939Equality is determined by the @var{=} predicate, or @code{equal?} if
940not given. An equality call is made just once for each element, but
941the order in which the calls are made on the elements is unspecified.
a0e07ba4 942
243bdb63 943The equality calls are always @code{(= x elem)}, ie.@: the given @var{x}
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944is first. This means for instance elements greater than 5 can be
945deleted with @code{(delete 5 lst <)}.
946
947@code{delete} does not modify @var{lst}, but the return might share a
948common tail with @var{lst}. @code{delete!} may modify the structure
949of @var{lst} to construct its return.
ea6ea01b 950
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951These functions extend the core @code{delete} and @code{delete!}
952(@pxref{List Modification}) in accepting an equality predicate. See
953also @code{lset-difference} (@pxref{SRFI-1 Set Operations}) for
954deleting multiple elements from a list.
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955@end deffn
956
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957@deffn {Scheme Procedure} delete-duplicates lst [=]
958@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} delete-duplicates! lst [=]
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959Return a list containing the elements of @var{lst} but without
960duplicates.
961
962When elements are equal, only the first in @var{lst} is retained.
963Equal elements can be anywhere in @var{lst}, they don't have to be
964adjacent. The returned list will have the retained elements in the
965same order as they were in @var{lst}.
966
967Equality is determined by the @var{=} predicate, or @code{equal?} if
968not given. Calls @code{(= x y)} are made with element @var{x} being
969before @var{y} in @var{lst}. A call is made at most once for each
970combination, but the sequence of the calls across the elements is
971unspecified.
972
973@code{delete-duplicates} does not modify @var{lst}, but the return
974might share a common tail with @var{lst}. @code{delete-duplicates!}
975may modify the structure of @var{lst} to construct its return.
976
977In the worst case, this is an @math{O(N^2)} algorithm because it must
978check each element against all those preceding it. For long lists it
979is more efficient to sort and then compare only adjacent elements.
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980@end deffn
981
982
983@node SRFI-1 Association Lists
3229f68b 984@subsubsection Association Lists
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985@cindex association list
986@cindex alist
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987
988@c FIXME::martin: Review me!
989
990Association lists are described in detail in section @ref{Association
991Lists}. The present section only documents the additional procedures
992for dealing with association lists defined by SRFI-1.
993
8f85c0c6 994@deffn {Scheme Procedure} assoc key alist [=]
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995Return the pair from @var{alist} which matches @var{key}. This
996extends the core @code{assoc} (@pxref{Retrieving Alist Entries}) by
997taking an optional @var{=} comparison procedure.
998
999The default comparison is @code{equal?}. If an @var{=} parameter is
679cceed 1000given it's called @code{(@var{=} @var{key} @var{alistcar})}, i.e.@: the
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1001given target @var{key} is the first argument, and a @code{car} from
1002@var{alist} is second.
ea6ea01b 1003
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1004For example a case-insensitive string lookup,
1005
1006@example
1007(assoc "yy" '(("XX" . 1) ("YY" . 2)) string-ci=?)
1008@result{} ("YY" . 2)
1009@end example
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1010@end deffn
1011
8f85c0c6 1012@deffn {Scheme Procedure} alist-cons key datum alist
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1013Cons a new association @var{key} and @var{datum} onto @var{alist} and
1014return the result. This is equivalent to
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1015
1016@lisp
1017(cons (cons @var{key} @var{datum}) @var{alist})
1018@end lisp
1019
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1020@code{acons} (@pxref{Adding or Setting Alist Entries}) in the Guile
1021core does the same thing.
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1022@end deffn
1023
8f85c0c6 1024@deffn {Scheme Procedure} alist-copy alist
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1025Return a newly allocated copy of @var{alist}, that means that the
1026spine of the list as well as the pairs are copied.
1027@end deffn
1028
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1029@deffn {Scheme Procedure} alist-delete key alist [=]
1030@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} alist-delete! key alist [=]
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1031Return a list containing the elements of @var{alist} but with those
1032elements whose keys are equal to @var{key} deleted. The returned
1033elements will be in the same order as they were in @var{alist}.
a0e07ba4 1034
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1035Equality is determined by the @var{=} predicate, or @code{equal?} if
1036not given. The order in which elements are tested is unspecified, but
679cceed 1037each equality call is made @code{(= key alistkey)}, i.e.@: the given
bd35f1f0
KR
1038@var{key} parameter is first and the key from @var{alist} second.
1039This means for instance all associations with a key greater than 5 can
1040be removed with @code{(alist-delete 5 alist <)}.
1041
1042@code{alist-delete} does not modify @var{alist}, but the return might
1043share a common tail with @var{alist}. @code{alist-delete!} may modify
1044the list structure of @var{alist} to construct its return.
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1045@end deffn
1046
1047
1048@node SRFI-1 Set Operations
3229f68b 1049@subsubsection Set Operations on Lists
7c2e18cd 1050@cindex list set operation
a0e07ba4 1051
4eb21177
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1052Lists can be used to represent sets of objects. The procedures in
1053this section operate on such lists as sets.
1054
1055Note that lists are not an efficient way to implement large sets. The
9aa0c3dd 1056procedures here typically take time @math{@var{m}@cross{}@var{n}} when
4eb21177
KR
1057operating on @var{m} and @var{n} element lists. Other data structures
1058like trees, bitsets (@pxref{Bit Vectors}) or hash tables (@pxref{Hash
1059Tables}) are faster.
1060
1061All these procedures take an equality predicate as the first argument.
1062This predicate is used for testing the objects in the list sets for
1063sameness. This predicate must be consistent with @code{eq?}
1064(@pxref{Equality}) in the sense that if two list elements are
1065@code{eq?} then they must also be equal under the predicate. This
1066simply means a given object must be equal to itself.
a0e07ba4 1067
df0a1002 1068@deffn {Scheme Procedure} lset<= = list @dots{}
4eb21177 1069Return @code{#t} if each list is a subset of the one following it.
df0a1002
BT
1070I.e., @var{list1} is a subset of @var{list2}, @var{list2} is a subset of
1071@var{list3}, etc., for as many lists as given. If only one list or no
1072lists are given, the return value is @code{#t}.
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1073
1074A list @var{x} is a subset of @var{y} if each element of @var{x} is
1075equal to some element in @var{y}. Elements are compared using the
1076given @var{=} procedure, called as @code{(@var{=} xelem yelem)}.
1077
1078@example
1079(lset<= eq?) @result{} #t
1080(lset<= eqv? '(1 2 3) '(1)) @result{} #f
1081(lset<= eqv? '(1 3 2) '(4 3 1 2)) @result{} #t
1082@end example
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1083@end deffn
1084
df0a1002 1085@deffn {Scheme Procedure} lset= = list @dots{}
4eb21177 1086Return @code{#t} if all argument lists are set-equal. @var{list1} is
df0a1002
BT
1087compared to @var{list2}, @var{list2} to @var{list3}, etc., for as many
1088lists as given. If only one list or no lists are given, the return
1089value is @code{#t}.
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1090
1091Two lists @var{x} and @var{y} are set-equal if each element of @var{x}
1092is equal to some element of @var{y} and conversely each element of
1093@var{y} is equal to some element of @var{x}. The order of the
1094elements in the lists doesn't matter. Element equality is determined
1095with the given @var{=} procedure, called as @code{(@var{=} xelem
1096yelem)}, but exactly which calls are made is unspecified.
1097
1098@example
1099(lset= eq?) @result{} #t
1100(lset= eqv? '(1 2 3) '(3 2 1)) @result{} #t
1101(lset= string-ci=? '("a" "A" "b") '("B" "b" "a")) @result{} #t
1102@end example
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1103@end deffn
1104
df0a1002
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1105@deffn {Scheme Procedure} lset-adjoin = list elem @dots{}
1106Add to @var{list} any of the given @var{elem}s not already in the list.
1107@var{elem}s are @code{cons}ed onto the start of @var{list} (so the
1108return value shares a common tail with @var{list}), but the order that
1109the @var{elem}s are added is unspecified.
4eb21177
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1110
1111The given @var{=} procedure is used for comparing elements, called as
df0a1002 1112@code{(@var{=} listelem elem)}, i.e., the second argument is one of
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1113the given @var{elem} parameters.
1114
1115@example
1116(lset-adjoin eqv? '(1 2 3) 4 1 5) @result{} (5 4 1 2 3)
1117@end example
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1118@end deffn
1119
df0a1002
BT
1120@deffn {Scheme Procedure} lset-union = list @dots{}
1121@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} lset-union! = list @dots{}
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1122Return the union of the argument list sets. The result is built by
1123taking the union of @var{list1} and @var{list2}, then the union of
df0a1002 1124that with @var{list3}, etc., for as many lists as given. For one list
4eb21177
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1125argument that list itself is the result, for no list arguments the
1126result is the empty list.
1127
1128The union of two lists @var{x} and @var{y} is formed as follows. If
1129@var{x} is empty then the result is @var{y}. Otherwise start with
1130@var{x} as the result and consider each @var{y} element (from first to
1131last). A @var{y} element not equal to something already in the result
1132is @code{cons}ed onto the result.
1133
1134The given @var{=} procedure is used for comparing elements, called as
1135@code{(@var{=} relem yelem)}. The first argument is from the result
1136accumulated so far, and the second is from the list being union-ed in.
1137But exactly which calls are made is otherwise unspecified.
1138
1139Notice that duplicate elements in @var{list1} (or the first non-empty
1140list) are preserved, but that repeated elements in subsequent lists
1141are only added once.
1142
1143@example
1144(lset-union eqv?) @result{} ()
1145(lset-union eqv? '(1 2 3)) @result{} (1 2 3)
1146(lset-union eqv? '(1 2 1 3) '(2 4 5) '(5)) @result{} (5 4 1 2 1 3)
1147@end example
1148
1149@code{lset-union} doesn't change the given lists but the result may
1150share a tail with the first non-empty list. @code{lset-union!} can
1151modify all of the given lists to form the result.
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1152@end deffn
1153
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1154@deffn {Scheme Procedure} lset-intersection = list1 list2 @dots{}
1155@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} lset-intersection! = list1 list2 @dots{}
4eb21177
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1156Return the intersection of @var{list1} with the other argument lists,
1157meaning those elements of @var{list1} which are also in all of
1158@var{list2} etc. For one list argument, just that list is returned.
1159
1160The test for an element of @var{list1} to be in the return is simply
1161that it's equal to some element in each of @var{list2} etc. Notice
1162this means an element appearing twice in @var{list1} but only once in
1163each of @var{list2} etc will go into the return twice. The return has
1164its elements in the same order as they were in @var{list1}.
1165
1166The given @var{=} procedure is used for comparing elements, called as
1167@code{(@var{=} elem1 elemN)}. The first argument is from @var{list1}
1168and the second is from one of the subsequent lists. But exactly which
1169calls are made and in what order is unspecified.
1170
1171@example
1172(lset-intersection eqv? '(x y)) @result{} (x y)
1173(lset-intersection eqv? '(1 2 3) '(4 3 2)) @result{} (2 3)
1174(lset-intersection eqv? '(1 1 2 2) '(1 2) '(2 1) '(2)) @result{} (2 2)
1175@end example
1176
1177The return from @code{lset-intersection} may share a tail with
1178@var{list1}. @code{lset-intersection!} may modify @var{list1} to form
1179its result.
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1180@end deffn
1181
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1182@deffn {Scheme Procedure} lset-difference = list1 list2 @dots{}
1183@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} lset-difference! = list1 list2 @dots{}
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1184Return @var{list1} with any elements in @var{list2}, @var{list3} etc
1185removed (ie.@: subtracted). For one list argument, just that list is
1186returned.
1187
1188The given @var{=} procedure is used for comparing elements, called as
1189@code{(@var{=} elem1 elemN)}. The first argument is from @var{list1}
1190and the second from one of the subsequent lists. But exactly which
1191calls are made and in what order is unspecified.
a0e07ba4 1192
4eb21177
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1193@example
1194(lset-difference eqv? '(x y)) @result{} (x y)
1195(lset-difference eqv? '(1 2 3) '(3 1)) @result{} (2)
1196(lset-difference eqv? '(1 2 3) '(3) '(2)) @result{} (1)
1197@end example
1198
1199The return from @code{lset-difference} may share a tail with
1200@var{list1}. @code{lset-difference!} may modify @var{list1} to form
1201its result.
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1202@end deffn
1203
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1204@deffn {Scheme Procedure} lset-diff+intersection = list1 list2 @dots{}
1205@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} lset-diff+intersection! = list1 list2 @dots{}
4eb21177
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1206Return two values (@pxref{Multiple Values}), the difference and
1207intersection of the argument lists as per @code{lset-difference} and
1208@code{lset-intersection} above.
1209
1210For two list arguments this partitions @var{list1} into those elements
1211of @var{list1} which are in @var{list2} and not in @var{list2}. (But
1212for more than two arguments there can be elements of @var{list1} which
1213are neither part of the difference nor the intersection.)
1214
1215One of the return values from @code{lset-diff+intersection} may share
1216a tail with @var{list1}. @code{lset-diff+intersection!} may modify
1217@var{list1} to form its results.
1218@end deffn
1219
df0a1002
BT
1220@deffn {Scheme Procedure} lset-xor = list @dots{}
1221@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} lset-xor! = list @dots{}
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1222Return an XOR of the argument lists. For two lists this means those
1223elements which are in exactly one of the lists. For more than two
1224lists it means those elements which appear in an odd number of the
1225lists.
1226
1227To be precise, the XOR of two lists @var{x} and @var{y} is formed by
1228taking those elements of @var{x} not equal to any element of @var{y},
1229plus those elements of @var{y} not equal to any element of @var{x}.
1230Equality is determined with the given @var{=} procedure, called as
1231@code{(@var{=} e1 e2)}. One argument is from @var{x} and the other
1232from @var{y}, but which way around is unspecified. Exactly which
1233calls are made is also unspecified, as is the order of the elements in
1234the result.
1235
1236@example
1237(lset-xor eqv? '(x y)) @result{} (x y)
1238(lset-xor eqv? '(1 2 3) '(4 3 2)) @result{} (4 1)
1239@end example
1240
1241The return from @code{lset-xor} may share a tail with one of the list
1242arguments. @code{lset-xor!} may modify @var{list1} to form its
1243result.
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1244@end deffn
1245
1246
1247@node SRFI-2
3229f68b 1248@subsection SRFI-2 - and-let*
8742c48b 1249@cindex SRFI-2
a0e07ba4 1250
4fd0db14
KR
1251@noindent
1252The following syntax can be obtained with
a0e07ba4 1253
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KR
1254@lisp
1255(use-modules (srfi srfi-2))
1256@end lisp
a0e07ba4 1257
abd731ff
NL
1258or alternatively
1259
1260@lisp
1261(use-modules (ice-9 and-let-star))
1262@end lisp
1263
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1264@deffn {library syntax} and-let* (clause @dots{}) body @dots{}
1265A combination of @code{and} and @code{let*}.
1266
1267Each @var{clause} is evaluated in turn, and if @code{#f} is obtained
1268then evaluation stops and @code{#f} is returned. If all are
1269non-@code{#f} then @var{body} is evaluated and the last form gives the
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KR
1270return value, or if @var{body} is empty then the result is @code{#t}.
1271Each @var{clause} should be one of the following,
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KR
1272
1273@table @code
1274@item (symbol expr)
1275Evaluate @var{expr}, check for @code{#f}, and bind it to @var{symbol}.
1276Like @code{let*}, that binding is available to subsequent clauses.
1277@item (expr)
1278Evaluate @var{expr} and check for @code{#f}.
1279@item symbol
1280Get the value bound to @var{symbol} and check for @code{#f}.
1281@end table
a0e07ba4 1282
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KR
1283Notice that @code{(expr)} has an ``extra'' pair of parentheses, for
1284instance @code{((eq? x y))}. One way to remember this is to imagine
1285the @code{symbol} in @code{(symbol expr)} is omitted.
a0e07ba4 1286
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KR
1287@code{and-let*} is good for calculations where a @code{#f} value means
1288termination, but where a non-@code{#f} value is going to be needed in
1289subsequent expressions.
1290
1291The following illustrates this, it returns text between brackets
1292@samp{[...]} in a string, or @code{#f} if there are no such brackets
1293(ie.@: either @code{string-index} gives @code{#f}).
1294
1295@example
1296(define (extract-brackets str)
1297 (and-let* ((start (string-index str #\[))
1298 (end (string-index str #\] start)))
1299 (substring str (1+ start) end)))
1300@end example
1301
1302The following shows plain variables and expressions tested too.
1303@code{diagnostic-levels} is taken to be an alist associating a
1304diagnostic type with a level. @code{str} is printed only if the type
1305is known and its level is high enough.
1306
1307@example
1308(define (show-diagnostic type str)
1309 (and-let* (want-diagnostics
1310 (level (assq-ref diagnostic-levels type))
1311 ((>= level current-diagnostic-level)))
1312 (display str)))
1313@end example
1314
1315The advantage of @code{and-let*} is that an extended sequence of
1316expressions and tests doesn't require lots of nesting as would arise
1317from separate @code{and} and @code{let*}, or from @code{cond} with
1318@code{=>}.
1319
1320@end deffn
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1321
1322
1323@node SRFI-4
3229f68b 1324@subsection SRFI-4 - Homogeneous numeric vector datatypes
8742c48b 1325@cindex SRFI-4
a0e07ba4 1326
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1327SRFI-4 provides an interface to uniform numeric vectors: vectors whose elements
1328are all of a single numeric type. Guile offers uniform numeric vectors for
1329signed and unsigned 8-bit, 16-bit, 32-bit, and 64-bit integers, two sizes of
1330floating point values, and, as an extension to SRFI-4, complex floating-point
1331numbers of these two sizes.
1332
1333The standard SRFI-4 procedures and data types may be included via loading the
1334appropriate module:
1335
1336@example
1337(use-modules (srfi srfi-4))
1338@end example
1339
1340This module is currently a part of the default Guile environment, but it is a
1341good practice to explicitly import the module. In the future, using SRFI-4
1342procedures without importing the SRFI-4 module will cause a deprecation message
1343to be printed. (Of course, one may call the C functions at any time. Would that
1344C had modules!)
1345
1346@menu
1347* SRFI-4 Overview:: The warp and weft of uniform numeric vectors.
1348* SRFI-4 API:: Uniform vectors, from Scheme and from C.
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1349* SRFI-4 and Bytevectors:: SRFI-4 vectors are backed by bytevectors.
1350* SRFI-4 Extensions:: Guile-specific extensions to the standard.
1351@end menu
1352
1353@node SRFI-4 Overview
1354@subsubsection SRFI-4 - Overview
1355
1356Uniform numeric vectors can be useful since they consume less memory
1357than the non-uniform, general vectors. Also, since the types they can
1358store correspond directly to C types, it is easier to work with them
1359efficiently on a low level. Consider image processing as an example,
1360where you want to apply a filter to some image. While you could store
1361the pixels of an image in a general vector and write a general
1362convolution function, things are much more efficient with uniform
1363vectors: the convolution function knows that all pixels are unsigned
13648-bit values (say), and can use a very tight inner loop.
1365
1366This is implemented in Scheme by having the compiler notice calls to the SRFI-4
1367accessors, and inline them to appropriate compiled code. From C you have access
1368to the raw array; functions for efficiently working with uniform numeric vectors
1369from C are listed at the end of this section.
1370
1371Uniform numeric vectors are the special case of one dimensional uniform
1372numeric arrays.
1373
1374There are 12 standard kinds of uniform numeric vectors, and they all have their
1375own complement of constructors, accessors, and so on. Procedures that operate on
1376a specific kind of uniform numeric vector have a ``tag'' in their name,
1377indicating the element type.
1378
1379@table @nicode
1380@item u8
1381unsigned 8-bit integers
1382
1383@item s8
1384signed 8-bit integers
1385
1386@item u16
1387unsigned 16-bit integers
1388
1389@item s16
1390signed 16-bit integers
1391
1392@item u32
1393unsigned 32-bit integers
1394
1395@item s32
1396signed 32-bit integers
1397
1398@item u64
1399unsigned 64-bit integers
1400
1401@item s64
1402signed 64-bit integers
1403
1404@item f32
1405the C type @code{float}
1406
1407@item f64
1408the C type @code{double}
1409
1410@end table
1411
1412In addition, Guile supports uniform arrays of complex numbers, with the
1413nonstandard tags:
1414
1415@table @nicode
1416
1417@item c32
1418complex numbers in rectangular form with the real and imaginary part
1419being a @code{float}
1420
1421@item c64
1422complex numbers in rectangular form with the real and imaginary part
1423being a @code{double}
1424
1425@end table
1426
1427The external representation (ie.@: read syntax) for these vectors is
1428similar to normal Scheme vectors, but with an additional tag from the
1429tables above indicating the vector's type. For example,
1430
1431@lisp
1432#u16(1 2 3)
1433#f64(3.1415 2.71)
1434@end lisp
1435
1436Note that the read syntax for floating-point here conflicts with
1437@code{#f} for false. In Standard Scheme one can write @code{(1 #f3)}
1438for a three element list @code{(1 #f 3)}, but for Guile @code{(1 #f3)}
1439is invalid. @code{(1 #f 3)} is almost certainly what one should write
1440anyway to make the intention clear, so this is rarely a problem.
1441
1442
1443@node SRFI-4 API
1444@subsubsection SRFI-4 - API
1445
1446Note that the @nicode{c32} and @nicode{c64} functions are only available from
1447@nicode{(srfi srfi-4 gnu)}.
1448
1449@deffn {Scheme Procedure} u8vector? obj
1450@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s8vector? obj
1451@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u16vector? obj
1452@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s16vector? obj
1453@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u32vector? obj
1454@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s32vector? obj
1455@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u64vector? obj
1456@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s64vector? obj
1457@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f32vector? obj
1458@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f64vector? obj
1459@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c32vector? obj
1460@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c64vector? obj
1461@deffnx {C Function} scm_u8vector_p (obj)
1462@deffnx {C Function} scm_s8vector_p (obj)
1463@deffnx {C Function} scm_u16vector_p (obj)
1464@deffnx {C Function} scm_s16vector_p (obj)
1465@deffnx {C Function} scm_u32vector_p (obj)
1466@deffnx {C Function} scm_s32vector_p (obj)
1467@deffnx {C Function} scm_u64vector_p (obj)
1468@deffnx {C Function} scm_s64vector_p (obj)
1469@deffnx {C Function} scm_f32vector_p (obj)
1470@deffnx {C Function} scm_f64vector_p (obj)
1471@deffnx {C Function} scm_c32vector_p (obj)
1472@deffnx {C Function} scm_c64vector_p (obj)
1473Return @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a homogeneous numeric vector of the
1474indicated type.
1475@end deffn
1476
1477@deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-u8vector n [value]
1478@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-s8vector n [value]
1479@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-u16vector n [value]
1480@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-s16vector n [value]
1481@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-u32vector n [value]
1482@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-s32vector n [value]
1483@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-u64vector n [value]
1484@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-s64vector n [value]
1485@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-f32vector n [value]
1486@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-f64vector n [value]
1487@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-c32vector n [value]
1488@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-c64vector n [value]
5f6ffd66
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1489@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_u8vector (n, value)
1490@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_s8vector (n, value)
1491@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_u16vector (n, value)
1492@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_s16vector (n, value)
1493@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_u32vector (n, value)
1494@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_s32vector (n, value)
1495@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_u64vector (n, value)
1496@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_s64vector (n, value)
1497@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_f32vector (n, value)
1498@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_f64vector (n, value)
1499@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_c32vector (n, value)
1500@deffnx {C Function} scm_make_c64vector (n, value)
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1501Return a newly allocated homogeneous numeric vector holding @var{n}
1502elements of the indicated type. If @var{value} is given, the vector
1503is initialized with that value, otherwise the contents are
1504unspecified.
1505@end deffn
1506
1507@deffn {Scheme Procedure} u8vector value @dots{}
1508@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s8vector value @dots{}
1509@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u16vector value @dots{}
1510@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s16vector value @dots{}
1511@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u32vector value @dots{}
1512@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s32vector value @dots{}
1513@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u64vector value @dots{}
1514@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s64vector value @dots{}
1515@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f32vector value @dots{}
1516@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f64vector value @dots{}
1517@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c32vector value @dots{}
1518@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c64vector value @dots{}
1519@deffnx {C Function} scm_u8vector (values)
1520@deffnx {C Function} scm_s8vector (values)
1521@deffnx {C Function} scm_u16vector (values)
1522@deffnx {C Function} scm_s16vector (values)
1523@deffnx {C Function} scm_u32vector (values)
1524@deffnx {C Function} scm_s32vector (values)
1525@deffnx {C Function} scm_u64vector (values)
1526@deffnx {C Function} scm_s64vector (values)
1527@deffnx {C Function} scm_f32vector (values)
1528@deffnx {C Function} scm_f64vector (values)
1529@deffnx {C Function} scm_c32vector (values)
1530@deffnx {C Function} scm_c64vector (values)
1531Return a newly allocated homogeneous numeric vector of the indicated
1532type, holding the given parameter @var{value}s. The vector length is
1533the number of parameters given.
1534@end deffn
1535
1536@deffn {Scheme Procedure} u8vector-length vec
1537@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s8vector-length vec
1538@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u16vector-length vec
1539@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s16vector-length vec
1540@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u32vector-length vec
1541@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s32vector-length vec
1542@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u64vector-length vec
1543@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s64vector-length vec
1544@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f32vector-length vec
1545@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f64vector-length vec
1546@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c32vector-length vec
1547@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c64vector-length vec
1548@deffnx {C Function} scm_u8vector_length (vec)
1549@deffnx {C Function} scm_s8vector_length (vec)
1550@deffnx {C Function} scm_u16vector_length (vec)
1551@deffnx {C Function} scm_s16vector_length (vec)
1552@deffnx {C Function} scm_u32vector_length (vec)
1553@deffnx {C Function} scm_s32vector_length (vec)
1554@deffnx {C Function} scm_u64vector_length (vec)
1555@deffnx {C Function} scm_s64vector_length (vec)
1556@deffnx {C Function} scm_f32vector_length (vec)
1557@deffnx {C Function} scm_f64vector_length (vec)
1558@deffnx {C Function} scm_c32vector_length (vec)
1559@deffnx {C Function} scm_c64vector_length (vec)
1560Return the number of elements in @var{vec}.
1561@end deffn
1562
1563@deffn {Scheme Procedure} u8vector-ref vec i
1564@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s8vector-ref vec i
1565@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u16vector-ref vec i
1566@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s16vector-ref vec i
1567@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u32vector-ref vec i
1568@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s32vector-ref vec i
1569@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u64vector-ref vec i
1570@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s64vector-ref vec i
1571@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f32vector-ref vec i
1572@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f64vector-ref vec i
1573@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c32vector-ref vec i
1574@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c64vector-ref vec i
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1575@deffnx {C Function} scm_u8vector_ref (vec, i)
1576@deffnx {C Function} scm_s8vector_ref (vec, i)
1577@deffnx {C Function} scm_u16vector_ref (vec, i)
1578@deffnx {C Function} scm_s16vector_ref (vec, i)
1579@deffnx {C Function} scm_u32vector_ref (vec, i)
1580@deffnx {C Function} scm_s32vector_ref (vec, i)
1581@deffnx {C Function} scm_u64vector_ref (vec, i)
1582@deffnx {C Function} scm_s64vector_ref (vec, i)
1583@deffnx {C Function} scm_f32vector_ref (vec, i)
1584@deffnx {C Function} scm_f64vector_ref (vec, i)
1585@deffnx {C Function} scm_c32vector_ref (vec, i)
1586@deffnx {C Function} scm_c64vector_ref (vec, i)
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1587Return the element at index @var{i} in @var{vec}. The first element
1588in @var{vec} is index 0.
1589@end deffn
1590
1591@deffn {Scheme Procedure} u8vector-set! vec i value
1592@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s8vector-set! vec i value
1593@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u16vector-set! vec i value
1594@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s16vector-set! vec i value
1595@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u32vector-set! vec i value
1596@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s32vector-set! vec i value
1597@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u64vector-set! vec i value
1598@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s64vector-set! vec i value
1599@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f32vector-set! vec i value
1600@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f64vector-set! vec i value
1601@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c32vector-set! vec i value
1602@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c64vector-set! vec i value
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1603@deffnx {C Function} scm_u8vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
1604@deffnx {C Function} scm_s8vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
1605@deffnx {C Function} scm_u16vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
1606@deffnx {C Function} scm_s16vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
1607@deffnx {C Function} scm_u32vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
1608@deffnx {C Function} scm_s32vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
1609@deffnx {C Function} scm_u64vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
1610@deffnx {C Function} scm_s64vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
1611@deffnx {C Function} scm_f32vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
1612@deffnx {C Function} scm_f64vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
1613@deffnx {C Function} scm_c32vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
1614@deffnx {C Function} scm_c64vector_set_x (vec, i, value)
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1615Set the element at index @var{i} in @var{vec} to @var{value}. The
1616first element in @var{vec} is index 0. The return value is
1617unspecified.
1618@end deffn
1619
1620@deffn {Scheme Procedure} u8vector->list vec
1621@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s8vector->list vec
1622@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u16vector->list vec
1623@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s16vector->list vec
1624@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u32vector->list vec
1625@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s32vector->list vec
1626@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} u64vector->list vec
1627@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} s64vector->list vec
1628@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f32vector->list vec
1629@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} f64vector->list vec
1630@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c32vector->list vec
1631@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} c64vector->list vec
1632@deffnx {C Function} scm_u8vector_to_list (vec)
1633@deffnx {C Function} scm_s8vector_to_list (vec)
1634@deffnx {C Function} scm_u16vector_to_list (vec)
1635@deffnx {C Function} scm_s16vector_to_list (vec)
1636@deffnx {C Function} scm_u32vector_to_list (vec)
1637@deffnx {C Function} scm_s32vector_to_list (vec)
1638@deffnx {C Function} scm_u64vector_to_list (vec)
1639@deffnx {C Function} scm_s64vector_to_list (vec)
1640@deffnx {C Function} scm_f32vector_to_list (vec)
1641@deffnx {C Function} scm_f64vector_to_list (vec)
1642@deffnx {C Function} scm_c32vector_to_list (vec)
1643@deffnx {C Function} scm_c64vector_to_list (vec)
1644Return a newly allocated list holding all elements of @var{vec}.
1645@end deffn
1646
1647@deffn {Scheme Procedure} list->u8vector lst
1648@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} list->s8vector lst
1649@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} list->u16vector lst
1650@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} list->s16vector lst
1651@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} list->u32vector lst
1652@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} list->s32vector lst
1653@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} list->u64vector lst
1654@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} list->s64vector lst
1655@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} list->f32vector lst
1656@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} list->f64vector lst
1657@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} list->c32vector lst
1658@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} list->c64vector lst
1659@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_u8vector (lst)
1660@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_s8vector (lst)
1661@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_u16vector (lst)
1662@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_s16vector (lst)
1663@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_u32vector (lst)
1664@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_s32vector (lst)
1665@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_u64vector (lst)
1666@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_s64vector (lst)
1667@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_f32vector (lst)
1668@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_f64vector (lst)
1669@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_c32vector (lst)
1670@deffnx {C Function} scm_list_to_c64vector (lst)
1671Return a newly allocated homogeneous numeric vector of the indicated type,
1672initialized with the elements of the list @var{lst}.
1673@end deffn
1674
1675@deftypefn {C Function} SCM scm_take_u8vector (const scm_t_uint8 *data, size_t len)
1676@deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_take_s8vector (const scm_t_int8 *data, size_t len)
1677@deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_take_u16vector (const scm_t_uint16 *data, size_t len)
1678@deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_take_s16vector (const scm_t_int16 *data, size_t len)
1679@deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_take_u32vector (const scm_t_uint32 *data, size_t len)
1680@deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_take_s32vector (const scm_t_int32 *data, size_t len)
1681@deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_take_u64vector (const scm_t_uint64 *data, size_t len)
1682@deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_take_s64vector (const scm_t_int64 *data, size_t len)
1683@deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_take_f32vector (const float *data, size_t len)
1684@deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_take_f64vector (const double *data, size_t len)
1685@deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_take_c32vector (const float *data, size_t len)
1686@deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_take_c64vector (const double *data, size_t len)
1687Return a new uniform numeric vector of the indicated type and length
1688that uses the memory pointed to by @var{data} to store its elements.
1689This memory will eventually be freed with @code{free}. The argument
1690@var{len} specifies the number of elements in @var{data}, not its size
1691in bytes.
1692
1693The @code{c32} and @code{c64} variants take a pointer to a C array of
1694@code{float}s or @code{double}s. The real parts of the complex numbers
1695are at even indices in that array, the corresponding imaginary parts are
1696at the following odd index.
1697@end deftypefn
1698
1699@deftypefn {C Function} {const scm_t_uint8 *} scm_u8vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1700@deftypefnx {C Function} {const scm_t_int8 *} scm_s8vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1701@deftypefnx {C Function} {const scm_t_uint16 *} scm_u16vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1702@deftypefnx {C Function} {const scm_t_int16 *} scm_s16vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1703@deftypefnx {C Function} {const scm_t_uint32 *} scm_u32vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1704@deftypefnx {C Function} {const scm_t_int32 *} scm_s32vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1705@deftypefnx {C Function} {const scm_t_uint64 *} scm_u64vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1706@deftypefnx {C Function} {const scm_t_int64 *} scm_s64vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
ecb87335 1707@deftypefnx {C Function} {const float *} scm_f32vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
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1708@deftypefnx {C Function} {const double *} scm_f64vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1709@deftypefnx {C Function} {const float *} scm_c32vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1710@deftypefnx {C Function} {const double *} scm_c64vector_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1711Like @code{scm_vector_elements} (@pxref{Vector Accessing from C}), but
1712returns a pointer to the elements of a uniform numeric vector of the
1713indicated kind.
1714@end deftypefn
1715
1716@deftypefn {C Function} {scm_t_uint8 *} scm_u8vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1717@deftypefnx {C Function} {scm_t_int8 *} scm_s8vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1718@deftypefnx {C Function} {scm_t_uint16 *} scm_u16vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1719@deftypefnx {C Function} {scm_t_int16 *} scm_s16vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1720@deftypefnx {C Function} {scm_t_uint32 *} scm_u32vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1721@deftypefnx {C Function} {scm_t_int32 *} scm_s32vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1722@deftypefnx {C Function} {scm_t_uint64 *} scm_u64vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1723@deftypefnx {C Function} {scm_t_int64 *} scm_s64vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
ecb87335 1724@deftypefnx {C Function} {float *} scm_f32vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
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1725@deftypefnx {C Function} {double *} scm_f64vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1726@deftypefnx {C Function} {float *} scm_c32vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1727@deftypefnx {C Function} {double *} scm_c64vector_writable_elements (SCM vec, scm_t_array_handle *handle, size_t *lenp, ssize_t *incp)
1728Like @code{scm_vector_writable_elements} (@pxref{Vector Accessing from
1729C}), but returns a pointer to the elements of a uniform numeric vector
1730of the indicated kind.
1731@end deftypefn
1732
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1733@node SRFI-4 and Bytevectors
1734@subsubsection SRFI-4 - Relation to bytevectors
1735
1736Guile implements SRFI-4 vectors using bytevectors (@pxref{Bytevectors}). Often
1737when you have a numeric vector, you end up wanting to write its bytes somewhere,
1738or have access to the underlying bytes, or read in bytes from somewhere else.
1739Bytevectors are very good at this sort of thing. But the SRFI-4 APIs are nicer
1740to use when doing number-crunching, because they are addressed by element and
1741not by byte.
1742
1743So as a compromise, Guile allows all bytevector functions to operate on numeric
1744vectors. They address the underlying bytes in the native endianness, as one
1745would expect.
1746
1747Following the same reasoning, that it's just bytes underneath, Guile also allows
1748uniform vectors of a given type to be accessed as if they were of any type. One
1749can fill a @nicode{u32vector}, and access its elements with
1750@nicode{u8vector-ref}. One can use @nicode{f64vector-ref} on bytevectors. It's
1751all the same to Guile.
1752
1753In this way, uniform numeric vectors may be written to and read from
1754input/output ports using the procedures that operate on bytevectors.
1755
1756@xref{Bytevectors}, for more information.
1757
1758
1759@node SRFI-4 Extensions
1760@subsubsection SRFI-4 - Guile extensions
1761
1762Guile defines some useful extensions to SRFI-4, which are not available in the
1763default Guile environment. They may be imported by loading the extensions
1764module:
1765
1766@example
1767(use-modules (srfi srfi-4 gnu))
1768@end example
1769
1770@deffn {Scheme Procedure} any->u8vector obj
1771@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} any->s8vector obj
1772@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} any->u16vector obj
1773@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} any->s16vector obj
1774@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} any->u32vector obj
1775@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} any->s32vector obj
1776@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} any->u64vector obj
1777@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} any->s64vector obj
1778@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} any->f32vector obj
1779@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} any->f64vector obj
1780@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} any->c32vector obj
1781@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} any->c64vector obj
1782@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_u8vector (obj)
1783@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_s8vector (obj)
1784@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_u16vector (obj)
1785@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_s16vector (obj)
1786@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_u32vector (obj)
1787@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_s32vector (obj)
1788@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_u64vector (obj)
1789@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_s64vector (obj)
1790@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_f32vector (obj)
1791@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_f64vector (obj)
1792@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_c32vector (obj)
1793@deffnx {C Function} scm_any_to_c64vector (obj)
1794Return a (maybe newly allocated) uniform numeric vector of the indicated
1795type, initialized with the elements of @var{obj}, which must be a list,
1796a vector, or a uniform vector. When @var{obj} is already a suitable
1797uniform numeric vector, it is returned unchanged.
1798@end deffn
1799
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1800
1801@node SRFI-6
3229f68b 1802@subsection SRFI-6 - Basic String Ports
8742c48b 1803@cindex SRFI-6
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1804
1805SRFI-6 defines the procedures @code{open-input-string},
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MW
1806@code{open-output-string} and @code{get-output-string}.
1807
1808Note that although versions of these procedures are included in the
1809Guile core, the core versions are not fully conformant with SRFI-6:
1810attempts to read or write characters that are not supported by the
1811current @code{%default-port-encoding} will fail.
1812
1813We therefore recommend that you import this module, which supports all
1814characters:
1815
1816@example
1817(use-modules (srfi srfi-6))
1818@end example
a0e07ba4
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1819
1820@node SRFI-8
3229f68b 1821@subsection SRFI-8 - receive
8742c48b 1822@cindex SRFI-8
a0e07ba4
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1823
1824@code{receive} is a syntax for making the handling of multiple-value
1825procedures easier. It is documented in @xref{Multiple Values}.
1826
1827
1828@node SRFI-9
3229f68b 1829@subsection SRFI-9 - define-record-type
a0e07ba4 1830
6afe385d 1831This SRFI is a syntax for defining new record types and creating
ec7e4f77
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1832predicate, constructor, and field getter and setter functions. It is
1833documented in the ``Compound Data Types'' section of the manual
1834(@pxref{SRFI-9 Records}).
a0e07ba4 1835
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1836
1837@node SRFI-10
3229f68b 1838@subsection SRFI-10 - Hash-Comma Reader Extension
8742c48b 1839@cindex SRFI-10
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1840
1841@cindex hash-comma
1842@cindex #,()
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1843This SRFI implements a reader extension @code{#,()} called hash-comma.
1844It allows the reader to give new kinds of objects, for use both in
1845data and as constants or literals in source code. This feature is
1846available with
a0e07ba4 1847
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1848@example
1849(use-modules (srfi srfi-10))
1850@end example
1851
1852@noindent
1853The new read syntax is of the form
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NJ
1854
1855@example
633acbe2 1856#,(@var{tag} @var{arg}@dots{})
a0e07ba4
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1857@end example
1858
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1859@noindent
1860where @var{tag} is a symbol and the @var{arg}s are objects taken as
1861parameters. @var{tag}s are registered with the following procedure.
a0e07ba4 1862
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1863@deffn {Scheme Procedure} define-reader-ctor tag proc
1864Register @var{proc} as the constructor for a hash-comma read syntax
679cceed 1865starting with symbol @var{tag}, i.e.@: @nicode{#,(@var{tag} arg@dots{})}.
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1866@var{proc} is called with the given arguments @code{(@var{proc}
1867arg@dots{})} and the object it returns is the result of the read.
1868@end deffn
a0e07ba4 1869
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1870@noindent
1871For example, a syntax giving a list of @var{N} copies of an object.
1872
1873@example
1874(define-reader-ctor 'repeat
1875 (lambda (obj reps)
1876 (make-list reps obj)))
1877
1878(display '#,(repeat 99 3))
1879@print{} (99 99 99)
1880@end example
1881
1882Notice the quote @nicode{'} when the @nicode{#,( )} is used. The
1883@code{repeat} handler returns a list and the program must quote to use
1884it literally, the same as any other list. Ie.
1885
1886@example
1887(display '#,(repeat 99 3))
a0e07ba4 1888@result{}
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1889(display '(99 99 99))
1890@end example
a0e07ba4 1891
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1892When a handler returns an object which is self-evaluating, like a
1893number or a string, then there's no need for quoting, just as there's
1894no need when giving those directly as literals. For example an
1895addition,
a0e07ba4 1896
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1897@example
1898(define-reader-ctor 'sum
1899 (lambda (x y)
1900 (+ x y)))
1901(display #,(sum 123 456)) @print{} 579
1902@end example
1903
1904A typical use for @nicode{#,()} is to get a read syntax for objects
1905which don't otherwise have one. For example, the following allows a
1906hash table to be given literally, with tags and values, ready for fast
1907lookup.
1908
1909@example
1910(define-reader-ctor 'hash
1911 (lambda elems
1912 (let ((table (make-hash-table)))
1913 (for-each (lambda (elem)
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KR
1914 (apply hash-set! table elem))
1915 elems)
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1916 table)))
1917
1918(define (animal->family animal)
1919 (hash-ref '#,(hash ("tiger" "cat")
1920 ("lion" "cat")
1921 ("wolf" "dog"))
1922 animal))
1923
1924(animal->family "lion") @result{} "cat"
1925@end example
1926
1927Or for example the following is a syntax for a compiled regular
1928expression (@pxref{Regular Expressions}).
1929
1930@example
1931(use-modules (ice-9 regex))
1932
1933(define-reader-ctor 'regexp make-regexp)
1934
1935(define (extract-angs str)
1936 (let ((match (regexp-exec '#,(regexp "<([A-Z0-9]+)>") str)))
1937 (and match
1938 (match:substring match 1))))
1939
1940(extract-angs "foo <BAR> quux") @result{} "BAR"
1941@end example
1942
1943@sp 1
1944@nicode{#,()} is somewhat similar to @code{define-macro}
1945(@pxref{Macros}) in that handler code is run to produce a result, but
1946@nicode{#,()} operates at the read stage, so it can appear in data for
1947@code{read} (@pxref{Scheme Read}), not just in code to be executed.
1948
1949Because @nicode{#,()} is handled at read-time it has no direct access
1950to variables etc. A symbol in the arguments is just a symbol, not a
1951variable reference. The arguments are essentially constants, though
1952the handler procedure can use them in any complicated way it might
1953want.
1954
1955Once @code{(srfi srfi-10)} has loaded, @nicode{#,()} is available
1956globally, there's no need to use @code{(srfi srfi-10)} in later
1957modules. Similarly the tags registered are global and can be used
1958anywhere once registered.
1959
1960There's no attempt to record what previous @nicode{#,()} forms have
1961been seen, if two identical forms occur then two calls are made to the
1962handler procedure. The handler might like to maintain a cache or
1963similar to avoid making copies of large objects, depending on expected
1964usage.
1965
1966In code the best uses of @nicode{#,()} are generally when there's a
1967lot of objects of a particular kind as literals or constants. If
1968there's just a few then some local variables and initializers are
1969fine, but that becomes tedious and error prone when there's a lot, and
1970the anonymous and compact syntax of @nicode{#,()} is much better.
a0e07ba4
NJ
1971
1972
1973@node SRFI-11
3229f68b 1974@subsection SRFI-11 - let-values
8742c48b 1975@cindex SRFI-11
a0e07ba4 1976
8742c48b 1977@findex let-values
c010924a 1978@findex let*-values
a0e07ba4 1979This module implements the binding forms for multiple values
c010924a 1980@code{let-values} and @code{let*-values}. These forms are similar to
a0e07ba4
NJ
1981@code{let} and @code{let*} (@pxref{Local Bindings}), but they support
1982binding of the values returned by multiple-valued expressions.
1983
1984Write @code{(use-modules (srfi srfi-11))} to make the bindings
1985available.
1986
1987@lisp
1988(let-values (((x y) (values 1 2))
1989 ((z f) (values 3 4)))
1990 (+ x y z f))
1991@result{}
199210
1993@end lisp
1994
1995@code{let-values} performs all bindings simultaneously, which means that
1996no expression in the binding clauses may refer to variables bound in the
c010924a 1997same clause list. @code{let*-values}, on the other hand, performs the
a0e07ba4
NJ
1998bindings sequentially, just like @code{let*} does for single-valued
1999expressions.
2000
2001
2002@node SRFI-13
3229f68b 2003@subsection SRFI-13 - String Library
8742c48b 2004@cindex SRFI-13
a0e07ba4 2005
5676b4fa 2006The SRFI-13 procedures are always available, @xref{Strings}.
a0e07ba4
NJ
2007
2008@node SRFI-14
3229f68b 2009@subsection SRFI-14 - Character-set Library
8742c48b 2010@cindex SRFI-14
a0e07ba4 2011
050ab45f
MV
2012The SRFI-14 data type and procedures are always available,
2013@xref{Character Sets}.
a0e07ba4
NJ
2014
2015@node SRFI-16
3229f68b 2016@subsection SRFI-16 - case-lambda
8742c48b 2017@cindex SRFI-16
7c2e18cd
KR
2018@cindex variable arity
2019@cindex arity, variable
a0e07ba4 2020
f916cbc4
AW
2021SRFI-16 defines a variable-arity @code{lambda} form,
2022@code{case-lambda}. This form is available in the default Guile
2023environment. @xref{Case-lambda}, for more information.
a0e07ba4
NJ
2024
2025@node SRFI-17
3229f68b 2026@subsection SRFI-17 - Generalized set!
8742c48b 2027@cindex SRFI-17
a0e07ba4 2028
9a18d8d4
KR
2029This SRFI implements a generalized @code{set!}, allowing some
2030``referencing'' functions to be used as the target location of a
2031@code{set!}. This feature is available from
2032
2033@example
2034(use-modules (srfi srfi-17))
2035@end example
2036
2037@noindent
2038For example @code{vector-ref} is extended so that
2039
2040@example
2041(set! (vector-ref vec idx) new-value)
2042@end example
2043
2044@noindent
2045is equivalent to
2046
2047@example
2048(vector-set! vec idx new-value)
2049@end example
2050
2051The idea is that a @code{vector-ref} expression identifies a location,
2052which may be either fetched or stored. The same form is used for the
2053location in both cases, encouraging visual clarity. This is similar
2054to the idea of an ``lvalue'' in C.
2055
2056The mechanism for this kind of @code{set!} is in the Guile core
2057(@pxref{Procedures with Setters}). This module adds definitions of
2058the following functions as procedures with setters, allowing them to
2059be targets of a @code{set!},
2060
2061@quotation
2062@nicode{car}, @nicode{cdr}, @nicode{caar}, @nicode{cadr},
2063@nicode{cdar}, @nicode{cddr}, @nicode{caaar}, @nicode{caadr},
2064@nicode{cadar}, @nicode{caddr}, @nicode{cdaar}, @nicode{cdadr},
2065@nicode{cddar}, @nicode{cdddr}, @nicode{caaaar}, @nicode{caaadr},
2066@nicode{caadar}, @nicode{caaddr}, @nicode{cadaar}, @nicode{cadadr},
2067@nicode{caddar}, @nicode{cadddr}, @nicode{cdaaar}, @nicode{cdaadr},
2068@nicode{cdadar}, @nicode{cdaddr}, @nicode{cddaar}, @nicode{cddadr},
2069@nicode{cdddar}, @nicode{cddddr}
2070
2071@nicode{string-ref}, @nicode{vector-ref}
2072@end quotation
2073
2074The SRFI specifies @code{setter} (@pxref{Procedures with Setters}) as
2075a procedure with setter, allowing the setter for a procedure to be
2076changed, eg.@: @code{(set! (setter foo) my-new-setter-handler)}.
2077Currently Guile does not implement this, a setter can only be
2078specified on creation (@code{getter-with-setter} below).
2079
2080@defun getter-with-setter
2081The same as the Guile core @code{make-procedure-with-setter}
2082(@pxref{Procedures with Setters}).
2083@end defun
a0e07ba4 2084
12991fed 2085
e68f492a
JG
2086@node SRFI-18
2087@subsection SRFI-18 - Multithreading support
2088@cindex SRFI-18
2089
2090This is an implementation of the SRFI-18 threading and synchronization
2091library. The functions and variables described here are provided by
2092
2093@example
2094(use-modules (srfi srfi-18))
2095@end example
2096
2097As a general rule, the data types and functions in this SRFI-18
2098implementation are compatible with the types and functions in Guile's
2099core threading code. For example, mutexes created with the SRFI-18
2100@code{make-mutex} function can be passed to the built-in Guile
2101function @code{lock-mutex} (@pxref{Mutexes and Condition Variables}),
2102and mutexes created with the built-in Guile function @code{make-mutex}
2103can be passed to the SRFI-18 function @code{mutex-lock!}. Cases in
2104which this does not hold true are noted in the following sections.
2105
2106@menu
2107* SRFI-18 Threads:: Executing code
2108* SRFI-18 Mutexes:: Mutual exclusion devices
2109* SRFI-18 Condition variables:: Synchronizing of groups of threads
2110* SRFI-18 Time:: Representation of times and durations
2111* SRFI-18 Exceptions:: Signalling and handling errors
2112@end menu
2113
2114@node SRFI-18 Threads
2115@subsubsection SRFI-18 Threads
2116
2117Threads created by SRFI-18 differ in two ways from threads created by
2118Guile's built-in thread functions. First, a thread created by SRFI-18
2119@code{make-thread} begins in a blocked state and will not start
2120execution until @code{thread-start!} is called on it. Second, SRFI-18
2121threads are constructed with a top-level exception handler that
2122captures any exceptions that are thrown on thread exit. In all other
2123regards, SRFI-18 threads are identical to normal Guile threads.
2124
2125@defun current-thread
2126Returns the thread that called this function. This is the same
2127procedure as the same-named built-in procedure @code{current-thread}
2128(@pxref{Threads}).
2129@end defun
2130
2131@defun thread? obj
2132Returns @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a thread, @code{#f} otherwise. This
2133is the same procedure as the same-named built-in procedure
2134@code{thread?} (@pxref{Threads}).
2135@end defun
2136
2137@defun make-thread thunk [name]
2138Call @code{thunk} in a new thread and with a new dynamic state,
2139returning the new thread and optionally assigning it the object name
2140@var{name}, which may be any Scheme object.
2141
2142Note that the name @code{make-thread} conflicts with the
2143@code{(ice-9 threads)} function @code{make-thread}. Applications
2144wanting to use both of these functions will need to refer to them by
2145different names.
2146@end defun
2147
2148@defun thread-name thread
2149Returns the name assigned to @var{thread} at the time of its creation,
2150or @code{#f} if it was not given a name.
2151@end defun
2152
2153@defun thread-specific thread
2154@defunx thread-specific-set! thread obj
2155Get or set the ``object-specific'' property of @var{thread}. In
2156Guile's implementation of SRFI-18, this value is stored as an object
2157property, and will be @code{#f} if not set.
2158@end defun
2159
2160@defun thread-start! thread
2161Unblocks @var{thread} and allows it to begin execution if it has not
2162done so already.
2163@end defun
2164
2165@defun thread-yield!
2166If one or more threads are waiting to execute, calling
2167@code{thread-yield!} forces an immediate context switch to one of them.
2168Otherwise, @code{thread-yield!} has no effect. @code{thread-yield!}
2169behaves identically to the Guile built-in function @code{yield}.
2170@end defun
2171
2172@defun thread-sleep! timeout
2173The current thread waits until the point specified by the time object
2174@var{timeout} is reached (@pxref{SRFI-18 Time}). This blocks the
2175thread only if @var{timeout} represents a point in the future. it is
2176an error for @var{timeout} to be @code{#f}.
2177@end defun
2178
2179@defun thread-terminate! thread
2180Causes an abnormal termination of @var{thread}. If @var{thread} is
2181not already terminated, all mutexes owned by @var{thread} become
2182unlocked/abandoned. If @var{thread} is the current thread,
2183@code{thread-terminate!} does not return. Otherwise
2184@code{thread-terminate!} returns an unspecified value; the termination
2185of @var{thread} will occur before @code{thread-terminate!} returns.
2186Subsequent attempts to join on @var{thread} will cause a ``terminated
2187thread exception'' to be raised.
2188
2189@code{thread-terminate!} is compatible with the thread cancellation
2190procedures in the core threads API (@pxref{Threads}) in that if a
2191cleanup handler has been installed for the target thread, it will be
2192called before the thread exits and its return value (or exception, if
2193any) will be stored for later retrieval via a call to
2194@code{thread-join!}.
2195@end defun
2196
2197@defun thread-join! thread [timeout [timeout-val]]
2198Wait for @var{thread} to terminate and return its exit value. When a
2199time value @var{timeout} is given, it specifies a point in time where
2200the waiting should be aborted. When the waiting is aborted,
64de6db5 2201@var{timeout-val} is returned if it is specified; otherwise, a
e68f492a
JG
2202@code{join-timeout-exception} exception is raised
2203(@pxref{SRFI-18 Exceptions}). Exceptions may also be raised if the
2204thread was terminated by a call to @code{thread-terminate!}
2205(@code{terminated-thread-exception} will be raised) or if the thread
2206exited by raising an exception that was handled by the top-level
2207exception handler (@code{uncaught-exception} will be raised; the
2208original exception can be retrieved using
2209@code{uncaught-exception-reason}).
2210@end defun
2211
2212
2213@node SRFI-18 Mutexes
2214@subsubsection SRFI-18 Mutexes
2215
2216The behavior of Guile's built-in mutexes is parameterized via a set of
2217flags passed to the @code{make-mutex} procedure in the core
2218(@pxref{Mutexes and Condition Variables}). To satisfy the requirements
2219for mutexes specified by SRFI-18, the @code{make-mutex} procedure
2220described below sets the following flags:
2221@itemize @bullet
2222@item
2223@code{recursive}: the mutex can be locked recursively
2224@item
2225@code{unchecked-unlock}: attempts to unlock a mutex that is already
2226unlocked will not raise an exception
2227@item
2228@code{allow-external-unlock}: the mutex can be unlocked by any thread,
2229not just the thread that locked it originally
2230@end itemize
2231
2232@defun make-mutex [name]
2233Returns a new mutex, optionally assigning it the object name
2234@var{name}, which may be any Scheme object. The returned mutex will be
2235created with the configuration described above. Note that the name
2236@code{make-mutex} conflicts with Guile core function @code{make-mutex}.
2237Applications wanting to use both of these functions will need to refer
2238to them by different names.
2239@end defun
2240
2241@defun mutex-name mutex
2242Returns the name assigned to @var{mutex} at the time of its creation,
2243or @code{#f} if it was not given a name.
2244@end defun
2245
2246@defun mutex-specific mutex
2247@defunx mutex-specific-set! mutex obj
2248Get or set the ``object-specific'' property of @var{mutex}. In Guile's
2249implementation of SRFI-18, this value is stored as an object property,
2250and will be @code{#f} if not set.
2251@end defun
2252
2253@defun mutex-state mutex
2254Returns information about the state of @var{mutex}. Possible values
2255are:
2256@itemize @bullet
2257@item
2258thread @code{T}: the mutex is in the locked/owned state and thread T
2259is the owner of the mutex
2260@item
2261symbol @code{not-owned}: the mutex is in the locked/not-owned state
2262@item
2263symbol @code{abandoned}: the mutex is in the unlocked/abandoned state
2264@item
2265symbol @code{not-abandoned}: the mutex is in the
2266unlocked/not-abandoned state
2267@end itemize
2268@end defun
2269
2270@defun mutex-lock! mutex [timeout [thread]]
2271Lock @var{mutex}, optionally specifying a time object @var{timeout}
2272after which to abort the lock attempt and a thread @var{thread} giving
2273a new owner for @var{mutex} different than the current thread. This
2274procedure has the same behavior as the @code{lock-mutex} procedure in
2275the core library.
2276@end defun
2277
2278@defun mutex-unlock! mutex [condition-variable [timeout]]
2279Unlock @var{mutex}, optionally specifying a condition variable
2280@var{condition-variable} on which to wait, either indefinitely or,
2281optionally, until the time object @var{timeout} has passed, to be
2282signalled. This procedure has the same behavior as the
2283@code{unlock-mutex} procedure in the core library.
2284@end defun
2285
2286
2287@node SRFI-18 Condition variables
2288@subsubsection SRFI-18 Condition variables
2289
2290SRFI-18 does not specify a ``wait'' function for condition variables.
2291Waiting on a condition variable can be simulated using the SRFI-18
2292@code{mutex-unlock!} function described in the previous section, or
2293Guile's built-in @code{wait-condition-variable} procedure can be used.
2294
2295@defun condition-variable? obj
2296Returns @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a condition variable, @code{#f}
2297otherwise. This is the same procedure as the same-named built-in
2298procedure
2299(@pxref{Mutexes and Condition Variables, @code{condition-variable?}}).
2300@end defun
2301
2302@defun make-condition-variable [name]
2303Returns a new condition variable, optionally assigning it the object
2304name @var{name}, which may be any Scheme object. This procedure
2305replaces a procedure of the same name in the core library.
2306@end defun
2307
2308@defun condition-variable-name condition-variable
64de6db5
BT
2309Returns the name assigned to @var{condition-variable} at the time of its
2310creation, or @code{#f} if it was not given a name.
e68f492a
JG
2311@end defun
2312
2313@defun condition-variable-specific condition-variable
2314@defunx condition-variable-specific-set! condition-variable obj
2315Get or set the ``object-specific'' property of
2316@var{condition-variable}. In Guile's implementation of SRFI-18, this
2317value is stored as an object property, and will be @code{#f} if not
2318set.
2319@end defun
2320
2321@defun condition-variable-signal! condition-variable
2322@defunx condition-variable-broadcast! condition-variable
2323Wake up one thread that is waiting for @var{condition-variable}, in
2324the case of @code{condition-variable-signal!}, or all threads waiting
2325for it, in the case of @code{condition-variable-broadcast!}. The
2326behavior of these procedures is equivalent to that of the procedures
2327@code{signal-condition-variable} and
2328@code{broadcast-condition-variable} in the core library.
2329@end defun
2330
2331
2332@node SRFI-18 Time
2333@subsubsection SRFI-18 Time
2334
2335The SRFI-18 time functions manipulate time in two formats: a
2336``time object'' type that represents an absolute point in time in some
2337implementation-specific way; and the number of seconds since some
2338unspecified ``epoch''. In Guile's implementation, the epoch is the
2339Unix epoch, 00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 1970.
2340
2341@defun current-time
2342Return the current time as a time object. This procedure replaces
2343the procedure of the same name in the core library, which returns the
2344current time in seconds since the epoch.
2345@end defun
2346
2347@defun time? obj
2348Returns @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a time object, @code{#f} otherwise.
2349@end defun
2350
2351@defun time->seconds time
2352@defunx seconds->time seconds
2353Convert between time objects and numerical values representing the
2354number of seconds since the epoch. When converting from a time object
2355to seconds, the return value is the number of seconds between
2356@var{time} and the epoch. When converting from seconds to a time
2357object, the return value is a time object that represents a time
2358@var{seconds} seconds after the epoch.
2359@end defun
2360
2361
2362@node SRFI-18 Exceptions
2363@subsubsection SRFI-18 Exceptions
2364
2365SRFI-18 exceptions are identical to the exceptions provided by
2366Guile's implementation of SRFI-34. The behavior of exception
2367handlers invoked to handle exceptions thrown from SRFI-18 functions,
2368however, differs from the conventional behavior of SRFI-34 in that
2369the continuation of the handler is the same as that of the call to
2370the function. Handlers are called in a tail-recursive manner; the
2371exceptions do not ``bubble up''.
2372
2373@defun current-exception-handler
2374Returns the current exception handler.
2375@end defun
2376
2377@defun with-exception-handler handler thunk
2378Installs @var{handler} as the current exception handler and calls the
2379procedure @var{thunk} with no arguments, returning its value as the
2380value of the exception. @var{handler} must be a procedure that accepts
2381a single argument. The current exception handler at the time this
2382procedure is called will be restored after the call returns.
2383@end defun
2384
2385@defun raise obj
2386Raise @var{obj} as an exception. This is the same procedure as the
2387same-named procedure defined in SRFI 34.
2388@end defun
2389
2390@defun join-timeout-exception? obj
2391Returns @code{#t} if @var{obj} is an exception raised as the result of
2392performing a timed join on a thread that does not exit within the
2393specified timeout, @code{#f} otherwise.
2394@end defun
2395
2396@defun abandoned-mutex-exception? obj
2397Returns @code{#t} if @var{obj} is an exception raised as the result of
2398attempting to lock a mutex that has been abandoned by its owner thread,
2399@code{#f} otherwise.
2400@end defun
2401
2402@defun terminated-thread-exception? obj
2403Returns @code{#t} if @var{obj} is an exception raised as the result of
2404joining on a thread that exited as the result of a call to
2405@code{thread-terminate!}.
2406@end defun
2407
2408@defun uncaught-exception? obj
2409@defunx uncaught-exception-reason exc
2410@code{uncaught-exception?} returns @code{#t} if @var{obj} is an
2411exception thrown as the result of joining a thread that exited by
2412raising an exception that was handled by the top-level exception
2413handler installed by @code{make-thread}. When this occurs, the
2414original exception is preserved as part of the exception thrown by
2415@code{thread-join!} and can be accessed by calling
2416@code{uncaught-exception-reason} on that exception. Note that
2417because this exception-preservation mechanism is a side-effect of
2418@code{make-thread}, joining on threads that exited as described above
2419but were created by other means will not raise this
2420@code{uncaught-exception} error.
2421@end defun
2422
2423
12991fed 2424@node SRFI-19
3229f68b 2425@subsection SRFI-19 - Time/Date Library
8742c48b 2426@cindex SRFI-19
7c2e18cd
KR
2427@cindex time
2428@cindex date
12991fed 2429
85600a0f
KR
2430This is an implementation of the SRFI-19 time/date library. The
2431functions and variables described here are provided by
12991fed
TTN
2432
2433@example
85600a0f 2434(use-modules (srfi srfi-19))
12991fed
TTN
2435@end example
2436
7d281fa5
KR
2437@strong{Caution}: The current code in this module incorrectly extends
2438the Gregorian calendar leap year rule back prior to the introduction
2439of those reforms in 1582 (or the appropriate year in various
2440countries). The Julian calendar was used prior to 1582, and there
2441were 10 days skipped for the reform, but the code doesn't implement
2442that.
2443
2444This will be fixed some time. Until then calculations for 1583
2445onwards are correct, but prior to that any day/month/year and day of
2446the week calculations are wrong.
2447
85600a0f
KR
2448@menu
2449* SRFI-19 Introduction::
2450* SRFI-19 Time::
2451* SRFI-19 Date::
2452* SRFI-19 Time/Date conversions::
2453* SRFI-19 Date to string::
2454* SRFI-19 String to date::
2455@end menu
12991fed 2456
85600a0f 2457@node SRFI-19 Introduction
3229f68b 2458@subsubsection SRFI-19 Introduction
85600a0f
KR
2459
2460@cindex universal time
2461@cindex atomic time
2462@cindex UTC
2463@cindex TAI
2464This module implements time and date representations and calculations,
2465in various time systems, including universal time (UTC) and atomic
2466time (TAI).
2467
2468For those not familiar with these time systems, TAI is based on a
2469fixed length second derived from oscillations of certain atoms. UTC
2470differs from TAI by an integral number of seconds, which is increased
2471or decreased at announced times to keep UTC aligned to a mean solar
2472day (the orbit and rotation of the earth are not quite constant).
2473
2474@cindex leap second
2475So far, only increases in the TAI
2476@tex
2477$\leftrightarrow$
2478@end tex
2479@ifnottex
2480<->
2481@end ifnottex
2482UTC difference have been needed. Such an increase is a ``leap
2483second'', an extra second of TAI introduced at the end of a UTC day.
2484When working entirely within UTC this is never seen, every day simply
2485has 86400 seconds. But when converting from TAI to a UTC date, an
2486extra 23:59:60 is present, where normally a day would end at 23:59:59.
2487Effectively the UTC second from 23:59:59 to 00:00:00 has taken two TAI
2488seconds.
2489
2490@cindex system clock
2491In the current implementation, the system clock is assumed to be UTC,
2492and a table of leap seconds in the code converts to TAI. See comments
2493in @file{srfi-19.scm} for how to update this table.
2494
2495@cindex julian day
2496@cindex modified julian day
2497Also, for those not familiar with the terminology, a @dfn{Julian Day}
2498is a real number which is a count of days and fraction of a day, in
2499UTC, starting from -4713-01-01T12:00:00Z, ie.@: midday Monday 1 Jan
7c2e18cd
KR
25004713 B.C. A @dfn{Modified Julian Day} is the same, but starting from
25011858-11-17T00:00:00Z, ie.@: midnight 17 November 1858 UTC. That time
2502is julian day 2400000.5.
85600a0f
KR
2503
2504@c The SRFI-1 spec says -4714-11-24T12:00:00Z (November 24, -4714 at
2505@c noon, UTC), but this is incorrect. It looks like it might have
2506@c arisen from the code incorrectly treating years a multiple of 100
7c2e18cd 2507@c but not 400 prior to 1582 as non-leap years, where instead the Julian
85600a0f
KR
2508@c calendar should be used so all multiples of 4 before 1582 are leap
2509@c years.
2510
2511
2512@node SRFI-19 Time
3229f68b 2513@subsubsection SRFI-19 Time
85600a0f
KR
2514@cindex time
2515
2516A @dfn{time} object has type, seconds and nanoseconds fields
2517representing a point in time starting from some epoch. This is an
2518arbitrary point in time, not just a time of day. Although times are
2519represented in nanoseconds, the actual resolution may be lower.
2520
2521The following variables hold the possible time types. For instance
2522@code{(current-time time-process)} would give the current CPU process
2523time.
2524
2525@defvar time-utc
2526Universal Coordinated Time (UTC).
2527@cindex UTC
2528@end defvar
12991fed 2529
85600a0f
KR
2530@defvar time-tai
2531International Atomic Time (TAI).
2532@cindex TAI
2533@end defvar
12991fed 2534
85600a0f
KR
2535@defvar time-monotonic
2536Monotonic time, meaning a monotonically increasing time starting from
2537an unspecified epoch.
12991fed 2538
85600a0f
KR
2539Note that in the current implementation @code{time-monotonic} is the
2540same as @code{time-tai}, and unfortunately is therefore affected by
2541adjustments to the system clock. Perhaps this will change in the
2542future.
2543@end defvar
12991fed 2544
85600a0f
KR
2545@defvar time-duration
2546A duration, meaning simply a difference between two times.
2547@end defvar
12991fed 2548
85600a0f
KR
2549@defvar time-process
2550CPU time spent in the current process, starting from when the process
2551began.
2552@cindex process time
2553@end defvar
12991fed 2554
85600a0f
KR
2555@defvar time-thread
2556CPU time spent in the current thread. Not currently implemented.
2557@cindex thread time
2558@end defvar
12991fed 2559
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KR
2560@sp 1
2561@defun time? obj
2562Return @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a time object, or @code{#f} if not.
2563@end defun
2564
2565@defun make-time type nanoseconds seconds
2566Create a time object with the given @var{type}, @var{seconds} and
2567@var{nanoseconds}.
2568@end defun
2569
2570@defun time-type time
2571@defunx time-nanosecond time
2572@defunx time-second time
2573@defunx set-time-type! time type
2574@defunx set-time-nanosecond! time nsec
2575@defunx set-time-second! time sec
2576Get or set the type, seconds or nanoseconds fields of a time object.
2577
2578@code{set-time-type!} merely changes the field, it doesn't convert the
2579time value. For conversions, see @ref{SRFI-19 Time/Date conversions}.
2580@end defun
2581
2582@defun copy-time time
2583Return a new time object, which is a copy of the given @var{time}.
2584@end defun
2585
2586@defun current-time [type]
2587Return the current time of the given @var{type}. The default
2588@var{type} is @code{time-utc}.
2589
2590Note that the name @code{current-time} conflicts with the Guile core
e68f492a
JG
2591@code{current-time} function (@pxref{Time}) as well as the SRFI-18
2592@code{current-time} function (@pxref{SRFI-18 Time}). Applications
2593wanting to use more than one of these functions will need to refer to
2594them by different names.
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KR
2595@end defun
2596
2597@defun time-resolution [type]
2598Return the resolution, in nanoseconds, of the given time @var{type}.
2599The default @var{type} is @code{time-utc}.
2600@end defun
2601
2602@defun time<=? t1 t2
2603@defunx time<? t1 t2
2604@defunx time=? t1 t2
2605@defunx time>=? t1 t2
2606@defunx time>? t1 t2
2607Return @code{#t} or @code{#f} according to the respective relation
2608between time objects @var{t1} and @var{t2}. @var{t1} and @var{t2}
2609must be the same time type.
2610@end defun
2611
2612@defun time-difference t1 t2
2613@defunx time-difference! t1 t2
2614Return a time object of type @code{time-duration} representing the
2615period between @var{t1} and @var{t2}. @var{t1} and @var{t2} must be
2616the same time type.
2617
2618@code{time-difference} returns a new time object,
2619@code{time-difference!} may modify @var{t1} to form its return.
2620@end defun
2621
2622@defun add-duration time duration
2623@defunx add-duration! time duration
2624@defunx subtract-duration time duration
2625@defunx subtract-duration! time duration
2626Return a time object which is @var{time} with the given @var{duration}
2627added or subtracted. @var{duration} must be a time object of type
2628@code{time-duration}.
2629
2630@code{add-duration} and @code{subtract-duration} return a new time
2631object. @code{add-duration!} and @code{subtract-duration!} may modify
2632the given @var{time} to form their return.
2633@end defun
2634
2635
2636@node SRFI-19 Date
3229f68b 2637@subsubsection SRFI-19 Date
85600a0f
KR
2638@cindex date
2639
2640A @dfn{date} object represents a date in the Gregorian calendar and a
2641time of day on that date in some timezone.
2642
2643The fields are year, month, day, hour, minute, second, nanoseconds and
2644timezone. A date object is immutable, its fields can be read but they
2645cannot be modified once the object is created.
2646
2647@defun date? obj
2648Return @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a date object, or @code{#f} if not.
2649@end defun
2650
2651@defun make-date nsecs seconds minutes hours date month year zone-offset
2652Create a new date object.
2653@c
2654@c FIXME: What can we say about the ranges of the values. The
2655@c current code looks it doesn't normalize, but expects then in their
2656@c usual range already.
2657@c
2658@end defun
2659
2660@defun date-nanosecond date
2661Nanoseconds, 0 to 999999999.
2662@end defun
2663
2664@defun date-second date
7c2e18cd
KR
2665Seconds, 0 to 59, or 60 for a leap second. 60 is never seen when working
2666entirely within UTC, it's only when converting to or from TAI.
85600a0f
KR
2667@end defun
2668
2669@defun date-minute date
2670Minutes, 0 to 59.
2671@end defun
2672
2673@defun date-hour date
2674Hour, 0 to 23.
2675@end defun
2676
2677@defun date-day date
2678Day of the month, 1 to 31 (or less, according to the month).
2679@end defun
2680
2681@defun date-month date
2682Month, 1 to 12.
2683@end defun
2684
2685@defun date-year date
7c2e18cd
KR
2686Year, eg.@: 2003. Dates B.C.@: are negative, eg.@: @math{-46} is 46
2687B.C. There is no year 0, year @math{-1} is followed by year 1.
85600a0f
KR
2688@end defun
2689
2690@defun date-zone-offset date
2691Time zone, an integer number of seconds east of Greenwich.
2692@end defun
2693
2694@defun date-year-day date
2695Day of the year, starting from 1 for 1st January.
2696@end defun
2697
2698@defun date-week-day date
2699Day of the week, starting from 0 for Sunday.
2700@end defun
2701
2702@defun date-week-number date dstartw
2703Week of the year, ignoring a first partial week. @var{dstartw} is the
2704day of the week which is taken to start a week, 0 for Sunday, 1 for
2705Monday, etc.
2706@c
2707@c FIXME: The spec doesn't say whether numbering starts at 0 or 1.
2708@c The code looks like it's 0, if that's the correct intention.
2709@c
2710@end defun
2711
2712@c The SRFI text doesn't actually give the default for tz-offset, but
2713@c the reference implementation has the local timezone and the
2714@c conversions functions all specify that, so it should be ok to
2715@c document it here.
2716@c
2717@defun current-date [tz-offset]
7c2e18cd
KR
2718Return a date object representing the current date/time, in UTC offset
2719by @var{tz-offset}. @var{tz-offset} is seconds east of Greenwich and
2720defaults to the local timezone.
85600a0f
KR
2721@end defun
2722
2723@defun current-julian-day
2724@cindex julian day
2725Return the current Julian Day.
2726@end defun
2727
2728@defun current-modified-julian-day
2729@cindex modified julian day
2730Return the current Modified Julian Day.
2731@end defun
2732
2733
2734@node SRFI-19 Time/Date conversions
3229f68b 2735@subsubsection SRFI-19 Time/Date conversions
7c2e18cd
KR
2736@cindex time conversion
2737@cindex date conversion
85600a0f
KR
2738
2739@defun date->julian-day date
2740@defunx date->modified-julian-day date
2741@defunx date->time-monotonic date
2742@defunx date->time-tai date
2743@defunx date->time-utc date
2744@end defun
2745@defun julian-day->date jdn [tz-offset]
2746@defunx julian-day->time-monotonic jdn
2747@defunx julian-day->time-tai jdn
2748@defunx julian-day->time-utc jdn
2749@end defun
2750@defun modified-julian-day->date jdn [tz-offset]
2751@defunx modified-julian-day->time-monotonic jdn
2752@defunx modified-julian-day->time-tai jdn
2753@defunx modified-julian-day->time-utc jdn
2754@end defun
2755@defun time-monotonic->date time [tz-offset]
2756@defunx time-monotonic->time-tai time
2757@defunx time-monotonic->time-tai! time
2758@defunx time-monotonic->time-utc time
2759@defunx time-monotonic->time-utc! time
2760@end defun
2761@defun time-tai->date time [tz-offset]
2762@defunx time-tai->julian-day time
2763@defunx time-tai->modified-julian-day time
2764@defunx time-tai->time-monotonic time
2765@defunx time-tai->time-monotonic! time
2766@defunx time-tai->time-utc time
2767@defunx time-tai->time-utc! time
2768@end defun
2769@defun time-utc->date time [tz-offset]
2770@defunx time-utc->julian-day time
2771@defunx time-utc->modified-julian-day time
2772@defunx time-utc->time-monotonic time
2773@defunx time-utc->time-monotonic! time
2774@defunx time-utc->time-tai time
2775@defunx time-utc->time-tai! time
2776@sp 1
2777Convert between dates, times and days of the respective types. For
2778instance @code{time-tai->time-utc} accepts a @var{time} object of type
2779@code{time-tai} and returns an object of type @code{time-utc}.
2780
85600a0f
KR
2781The @code{!} variants may modify their @var{time} argument to form
2782their return. The plain functions create a new object.
702e6e09
KR
2783
2784For conversions to dates, @var{tz-offset} is seconds east of
2785Greenwich. The default is the local timezone, at the given time, as
2786provided by the system, using @code{localtime} (@pxref{Time}).
2787
2788On 32-bit systems, @code{localtime} is limited to a 32-bit
2789@code{time_t}, so a default @var{tz-offset} is only available for
2790times between Dec 1901 and Jan 2038. For prior dates an application
2791might like to use the value in 1902, though some locations have zone
2792changes prior to that. For future dates an application might like to
2793assume today's rules extend indefinitely. But for correct daylight
2794savings transitions it will be necessary to take an offset for the
2795same day and time but a year in range and which has the same starting
2796weekday and same leap/non-leap (to support rules like last Sunday in
2797October).
85600a0f
KR
2798@end defun
2799
2800@node SRFI-19 Date to string
3229f68b 2801@subsubsection SRFI-19 Date to string
85600a0f 2802@cindex date to string
7c2e18cd 2803@cindex string, from date
85600a0f
KR
2804
2805@defun date->string date [format]
2806Convert a date to a string under the control of a format.
2807@var{format} should be a string containing @samp{~} escapes, which
2808will be expanded as per the following conversion table. The default
2809@var{format} is @samp{~c}, a locale-dependent date and time.
2810
2811Many of these conversion characters are the same as POSIX
2812@code{strftime} (@pxref{Time}), but there are some extras and some
2813variations.
2814
2815@multitable {MMMM} {MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM}
2816@item @nicode{~~} @tab literal ~
2817@item @nicode{~a} @tab locale abbreviated weekday, eg.@: @samp{Sun}
2818@item @nicode{~A} @tab locale full weekday, eg.@: @samp{Sunday}
2819@item @nicode{~b} @tab locale abbreviated month, eg.@: @samp{Jan}
2820@item @nicode{~B} @tab locale full month, eg.@: @samp{January}
2821@item @nicode{~c} @tab locale date and time, eg.@: @*
2822@samp{Fri Jul 14 20:28:42-0400 2000}
2823@item @nicode{~d} @tab day of month, zero padded, @samp{01} to @samp{31}
2824
2825@c Spec says d/m/y, reference implementation says m/d/y.
2826@c Apparently the reference code was the intention, but would like to
2827@c see an errata published for the spec before contradicting it here.
2828@c
2829@c @item @nicode{~D} @tab date @nicode{~d/~m/~y}
2830
2831@item @nicode{~e} @tab day of month, blank padded, @samp{ 1} to @samp{31}
2832@item @nicode{~f} @tab seconds and fractional seconds,
2833with locale decimal point, eg.@: @samp{5.2}
2834@item @nicode{~h} @tab same as @nicode{~b}
2835@item @nicode{~H} @tab hour, 24-hour clock, zero padded, @samp{00} to @samp{23}
2836@item @nicode{~I} @tab hour, 12-hour clock, zero padded, @samp{01} to @samp{12}
2837@item @nicode{~j} @tab day of year, zero padded, @samp{001} to @samp{366}
2838@item @nicode{~k} @tab hour, 24-hour clock, blank padded, @samp{ 0} to @samp{23}
2839@item @nicode{~l} @tab hour, 12-hour clock, blank padded, @samp{ 1} to @samp{12}
2840@item @nicode{~m} @tab month, zero padded, @samp{01} to @samp{12}
2841@item @nicode{~M} @tab minute, zero padded, @samp{00} to @samp{59}
2842@item @nicode{~n} @tab newline
2843@item @nicode{~N} @tab nanosecond, zero padded, @samp{000000000} to @samp{999999999}
2844@item @nicode{~p} @tab locale AM or PM
2845@item @nicode{~r} @tab time, 12 hour clock, @samp{~I:~M:~S ~p}
2846@item @nicode{~s} @tab number of full seconds since ``the epoch'' in UTC
2847@item @nicode{~S} @tab second, zero padded @samp{00} to @samp{60} @*
2848(usual limit is 59, 60 is a leap second)
2849@item @nicode{~t} @tab horizontal tab character
2850@item @nicode{~T} @tab time, 24 hour clock, @samp{~H:~M:~S}
2851@item @nicode{~U} @tab week of year, Sunday first day of week,
2852@samp{00} to @samp{52}
2853@item @nicode{~V} @tab week of year, Monday first day of week,
2854@samp{01} to @samp{53}
2855@item @nicode{~w} @tab day of week, 0 for Sunday, @samp{0} to @samp{6}
2856@item @nicode{~W} @tab week of year, Monday first day of week,
2857@samp{00} to @samp{52}
2858
2859@c The spec has ~x as an apparent duplicate of ~W, and ~X as a locale
2860@c date. The reference code has ~x as the locale date and ~X as a
2861@c locale time. The rule is apparently that the code should be
2862@c believed, but would like to see an errata for the spec before
2863@c contradicting it here.
2864@c
2865@c @item @nicode{~x} @tab week of year, Monday as first day of week,
2866@c @samp{00} to @samp{53}
2867@c @item @nicode{~X} @tab locale date, eg.@: @samp{07/31/00}
2868
2869@item @nicode{~y} @tab year, two digits, @samp{00} to @samp{99}
2870@item @nicode{~Y} @tab year, full, eg.@: @samp{2003}
2871@item @nicode{~z} @tab time zone, RFC-822 style
2872@item @nicode{~Z} @tab time zone symbol (not currently implemented)
2873@item @nicode{~1} @tab ISO-8601 date, @samp{~Y-~m-~d}
d6bd1826
IP
2874@item @nicode{~2} @tab ISO-8601 time+zone, @samp{~H:~M:~S~z}
2875@item @nicode{~3} @tab ISO-8601 time, @samp{~H:~M:~S}
2876@item @nicode{~4} @tab ISO-8601 date/time+zone, @samp{~Y-~m-~dT~H:~M:~S~z}
2877@item @nicode{~5} @tab ISO-8601 date/time, @samp{~Y-~m-~dT~H:~M:~S}
85600a0f
KR
2878@end multitable
2879@end defun
2880
2881Conversions @samp{~D}, @samp{~x} and @samp{~X} are not currently
2882described here, since the specification and reference implementation
2883differ.
2884
a2f00b9b
LC
2885Conversion is locale-dependent on systems that support it
2886(@pxref{Accessing Locale Information}). @xref{Locales,
2887@code{setlocale}}, for information on how to change the current
2888locale.
85600a0f
KR
2889
2890
2891@node SRFI-19 String to date
3229f68b 2892@subsubsection SRFI-19 String to date
85600a0f 2893@cindex string to date
7c2e18cd 2894@cindex date, from string
85600a0f
KR
2895
2896@c FIXME: Can we say what happens when an incomplete date is
679cceed 2897@c converted? I.e. fields left as 0, or what? The spec seems to be
85600a0f
KR
2898@c silent on this.
2899
2900@defun string->date input template
2901Convert an @var{input} string to a date under the control of a
2902@var{template} string. Return a newly created date object.
2903
2904Literal characters in @var{template} must match characters in
2905@var{input} and @samp{~} escapes must match the input forms described
2906in the table below. ``Skip to'' means characters up to one of the
2907given type are ignored, or ``no skip'' for no skipping. ``Read'' is
2908what's then read, and ``Set'' is the field affected in the date
2909object.
2910
2911For example @samp{~Y} skips input characters until a digit is reached,
2912at which point it expects a year and stores that to the year field of
2913the date.
2914
2915@multitable {MMMM} {@nicode{char-alphabetic?}} {MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM} {@nicode{date-zone-offset}}
2916@item
2917@tab Skip to
2918@tab Read
2919@tab Set
2920
2921@item @nicode{~~}
2922@tab no skip
2923@tab literal ~
2924@tab nothing
2925
2926@item @nicode{~a}
2927@tab @nicode{char-alphabetic?}
2928@tab locale abbreviated weekday name
2929@tab nothing
2930
2931@item @nicode{~A}
2932@tab @nicode{char-alphabetic?}
2933@tab locale full weekday name
2934@tab nothing
2935
2936@c Note that the SRFI spec says that ~b and ~B don't set anything,
2937@c but that looks like a mistake. The reference implementation sets
2938@c the month field, which seems sensible and is what we describe
2939@c here.
2940
2941@item @nicode{~b}
2942@tab @nicode{char-alphabetic?}
2943@tab locale abbreviated month name
2944@tab @nicode{date-month}
2945
2946@item @nicode{~B}
2947@tab @nicode{char-alphabetic?}
2948@tab locale full month name
2949@tab @nicode{date-month}
2950
2951@item @nicode{~d}
2952@tab @nicode{char-numeric?}
2953@tab day of month
2954@tab @nicode{date-day}
2955
2956@item @nicode{~e}
2957@tab no skip
2958@tab day of month, blank padded
2959@tab @nicode{date-day}
2960
2961@item @nicode{~h}
2962@tab same as @samp{~b}
2963
2964@item @nicode{~H}
2965@tab @nicode{char-numeric?}
2966@tab hour
2967@tab @nicode{date-hour}
2968
2969@item @nicode{~k}
2970@tab no skip
2971@tab hour, blank padded
2972@tab @nicode{date-hour}
2973
2974@item @nicode{~m}
2975@tab @nicode{char-numeric?}
2976@tab month
2977@tab @nicode{date-month}
2978
2979@item @nicode{~M}
2980@tab @nicode{char-numeric?}
2981@tab minute
2982@tab @nicode{date-minute}
2983
2984@item @nicode{~S}
2985@tab @nicode{char-numeric?}
2986@tab second
2987@tab @nicode{date-second}
2988
2989@item @nicode{~y}
2990@tab no skip
2991@tab 2-digit year
2992@tab @nicode{date-year} within 50 years
2993
2994@item @nicode{~Y}
2995@tab @nicode{char-numeric?}
2996@tab year
2997@tab @nicode{date-year}
2998
2999@item @nicode{~z}
3000@tab no skip
3001@tab time zone
3002@tab date-zone-offset
3003@end multitable
3004
3005Notice that the weekday matching forms don't affect the date object
3006returned, instead the weekday will be derived from the day, month and
3007year.
3008
a2f00b9b
LC
3009Conversion is locale-dependent on systems that support it
3010(@pxref{Accessing Locale Information}). @xref{Locales,
3011@code{setlocale}}, for information on how to change the current
3012locale.
85600a0f 3013@end defun
12991fed 3014
8e9af854
NL
3015@node SRFI-23
3016@subsection SRFI-23 - Error Reporting
3017@cindex SRFI-23
3018
3019The SRFI-23 @code{error} procedure is always available.
1de8c1ae 3020
b0b55bd6 3021@node SRFI-26
3229f68b 3022@subsection SRFI-26 - specializing parameters
1de8c1ae 3023@cindex SRFI-26
7c2e18cd
KR
3024@cindex parameter specialize
3025@cindex argument specialize
3026@cindex specialize parameter
1de8c1ae
KR
3027
3028This SRFI provides a syntax for conveniently specializing selected
3029parameters of a function. It can be used with,
3030
3031@example
3032(use-modules (srfi srfi-26))
3033@end example
3034
df0a1002
BT
3035@deffn {library syntax} cut slot1 slot2 @dots{}
3036@deffnx {library syntax} cute slot1 slot2 @dots{}
3037Return a new procedure which will make a call (@var{slot1} @var{slot2}
3038@dots{}) but with selected parameters specialized to given expressions.
1de8c1ae
KR
3039
3040An example will illustrate the idea. The following is a
3041specialization of @code{write}, sending output to
3042@code{my-output-port},
3043
3044@example
3045(cut write <> my-output-port)
3046@result{}
3047(lambda (obj) (write obj my-output-port))
3048@end example
3049
3050The special symbol @code{<>} indicates a slot to be filled by an
3051argument to the new procedure. @code{my-output-port} on the other
3052hand is an expression to be evaluated and passed, ie.@: it specializes
3053the behaviour of @code{write}.
3054
3055@table @nicode
3056@item <>
3057A slot to be filled by an argument from the created procedure.
3058Arguments are assigned to @code{<>} slots in the order they appear in
3059the @code{cut} form, there's no way to re-arrange arguments.
3060
3061The first argument to @code{cut} is usually a procedure (or expression
3062giving a procedure), but @code{<>} is allowed there too. For example,
3063
3064@example
3065(cut <> 1 2 3)
3066@result{}
3067(lambda (proc) (proc 1 2 3))
3068@end example
3069
3070@item <...>
3071A slot to be filled by all remaining arguments from the new procedure.
3072This can only occur at the end of a @code{cut} form.
3073
3074For example, a procedure taking a variable number of arguments like
3075@code{max} but in addition enforcing a lower bound,
3076
3077@example
3078(define my-lower-bound 123)
3079
3080(cut max my-lower-bound <...>)
3081@result{}
3082(lambda arglist (apply max my-lower-bound arglist))
3083@end example
3084@end table
3085
3086For @code{cut} the specializing expressions are evaluated each time
3087the new procedure is called. For @code{cute} they're evaluated just
3088once, when the new procedure is created. The name @code{cute} stands
3089for ``@code{cut} with evaluated arguments''. In all cases the
3090evaluations take place in an unspecified order.
3091
3092The following illustrates the difference between @code{cut} and
3093@code{cute},
3094
3095@example
3096(cut format <> "the time is ~s" (current-time))
3097@result{}
3098(lambda (port) (format port "the time is ~s" (current-time)))
3099
3100(cute format <> "the time is ~s" (current-time))
3101@result{}
3102(let ((val (current-time)))
3103 (lambda (port) (format port "the time is ~s" val))
3104@end example
3105
3106(There's no provision for a mixture of @code{cut} and @code{cute}
3107where some expressions would be evaluated every time but others
3108evaluated only once.)
3109
3110@code{cut} is really just a shorthand for the sort of @code{lambda}
3111forms shown in the above examples. But notice @code{cut} avoids the
3112need to name unspecialized parameters, and is more compact. Use in
3113functional programming style or just with @code{map}, @code{for-each}
3114or similar is typical.
3115
3116@example
3117(map (cut * 2 <>) '(1 2 3 4))
3118
3119(for-each (cut write <> my-port) my-list)
3120@end example
3121@end deffn
b0b55bd6 3122
56ec46a7
AR
3123@node SRFI-27
3124@subsection SRFI-27 - Sources of Random Bits
3125@cindex SRFI-27
3126
6e3d49a0
AR
3127This subsection is based on the
3128@uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-27/srfi-27.html, specification of
3129SRFI-27} written by Sebastian Egner.
3130
3131@c The copyright notice and license text of the SRFI-27 specification is
3132@c reproduced below:
56ec46a7
AR
3133
3134@c Copyright (C) Sebastian Egner (2002). All Rights Reserved.
3135
3136@c Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
3137@c copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
3138@c "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
3139@c without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
3140@c distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
3141@c permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
3142@c the following conditions:
3143
3144@c The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
3145@c in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
3146
3147@c THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
3148@c OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
3149@c MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
3150@c NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
3151@c LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
3152@c OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
3153@c WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
3154
56ec46a7
AR
3155This SRFI provides access to a (pseudo) random number generator; for
3156Guile's built-in random number facilities, which SRFI-27 is implemented
3157upon, @xref{Random}. With SRFI-27, random numbers are obtained from a
3158@emph{random source}, which encapsulates a random number generation
3159algorithm and its state.
3160
3161@menu
3162* SRFI-27 Default Random Source:: Obtaining random numbers
3163* SRFI-27 Random Sources:: Creating and manipulating random sources
3164* SRFI-27 Random Number Generators:: Obtaining random number generators
3165@end menu
3166
3167@node SRFI-27 Default Random Source
3168@subsubsection The Default Random Source
3169@cindex SRFI-27
3170
3171@defun random-integer n
3172Return a random number between zero (inclusive) and @var{n} (exclusive),
3173using the default random source. The numbers returned have a uniform
3174distribution.
3175@end defun
3176
3177@defun random-real
3178Return a random number in (0,1), using the default random source. The
3179numbers returned have a uniform distribution.
3180@end defun
3181
3182@defun default-random-source
3183A random source from which @code{random-integer} and @code{random-real}
3184have been derived using @code{random-source-make-integers} and
3185@code{random-source-make-reals} (@pxref{SRFI-27 Random Number Generators}
3186for those procedures). Note that an assignment to
3187@code{default-random-source} does not change @code{random-integer} or
3188@code{random-real}; it is also strongly recommended not to assign a new
3189value.
3190@end defun
3191
3192@node SRFI-27 Random Sources
3193@subsubsection Random Sources
3194@cindex SRFI-27
3195
3196@defun make-random-source
3197Create a new random source. The stream of random numbers obtained from
3198each random source created by this procedure will be identical, unless
3199its state is changed by one of the procedures below.
3200@end defun
3201
3202@defun random-source? object
3203Tests whether @var{object} is a random source. Random sources are a
3204disjoint type.
3205@end defun
3206
3207@defun random-source-randomize! source
3208Attempt to set the state of the random source to a truly random value.
3209The current implementation uses a seed based on the current system time.
3210@end defun
3211
3212@defun random-source-pseudo-randomize! source i j
3213Changes the state of the random source s into the initial state of the
3214(@var{i}, @var{j})-th independent random source, where @var{i} and
3215@var{j} are non-negative integers. This procedure provides a mechanism
3216to obtain a large number of independent random sources (usually all
3217derived from the same backbone generator), indexed by two integers. In
3218contrast to @code{random-source-randomize!}, this procedure is entirely
3219deterministic.
3220@end defun
3221
3222The state associated with a random state can be obtained an reinstated
3223with the following procedures:
3224
3225@defun random-source-state-ref source
3226@defunx random-source-state-set! source state
3227Get and set the state of a random source. No assumptions should be made
3228about the nature of the state object, besides it having an external
679cceed 3229representation (i.e.@: it can be passed to @code{write} and subsequently
56ec46a7
AR
3230@code{read} back).
3231@end defun
3232
3233@node SRFI-27 Random Number Generators
3234@subsubsection Obtaining random number generator procedures
3235@cindex SRFI-27
3236
3237@defun random-source-make-integers source
3238Obtains a procedure to generate random integers using the random source
3239@var{source}. The returned procedure takes a single argument @var{n},
3240which must be a positive integer, and returns the next uniformly
3241distributed random integer from the interval @{0, ..., @var{n}-1@} by
3242advancing the state of @var{source}.
3243
3244If an application obtains and uses several generators for the same
3245random source @var{source}, a call to any of these generators advances
3246the state of @var{source}. Hence, the generators do not produce the
3247same sequence of random integers each but rather share a state. This
3248also holds for all other types of generators derived from a fixed random
3249sources.
3250
3251While the SRFI text specifies that ``Implementations that support
3252concurrency make sure that the state of a generator is properly
3253advanced'', this is currently not the case in Guile's implementation of
3254SRFI-27, as it would cause a severe performance penalty. So in
3255multi-threaded programs, you either must perform locking on random
3256sources shared between threads yourself, or use different random sources
3257for multiple threads.
3258@end defun
3259
3260@defun random-source-make-reals source
3261@defunx random-source-make-reals source unit
3262Obtains a procedure to generate random real numbers @math{0 < x < 1}
3263using the random source @var{source}. The procedure rand is called
3264without arguments.
3265
3266The optional parameter @var{unit} determines the type of numbers being
3267produced by the returned procedure and the quantization of the output.
3268@var{unit} must be a number such that @math{0 < @var{unit} < 1}. The
3269numbers created by the returned procedure are of the same numerical type
3270as @var{unit} and the potential output values are spaced by at most
3271@var{unit}. One can imagine rand to create numbers as @var{x} *
3272@var{unit} where @var{x} is a random integer in @{1, ...,
3273floor(1/unit)-1@}. Note, however, that this need not be the way the
3274values are actually created and that the actual resolution of rand can
3275be much higher than unit. In case @var{unit} is absent it defaults to a
3276reasonably small value (related to the width of the mantissa of an
3277efficient number format).
3278@end defun
3279
cffa9bd6
CJY
3280@node SRFI-28
3281@subsection SRFI-28 - Basic Format Strings
3282@cindex SRFI-28
3283
3284SRFI-28 provides a basic @code{format} procedure that provides only
3285the @code{~a}, @code{~s}, @code{~%}, and @code{~~} format specifiers.
3286You can import this procedure by using:
3287
3288@lisp
3289(use-modules (srfi srfi-28))
3290@end lisp
3291
3292@deffn {Scheme Procedure} format message arg @dots{}
3293Returns a formatted message, using @var{message} as the format string,
3294which can contain the following format specifiers:
3295
3296@table @code
3297@item ~a
3298Insert the textual representation of the next @var{arg}, as if printed
3299by @code{display}.
3300
3301@item ~s
3302Insert the textual representation of the next @var{arg}, as if printed
3303by @code{write}.
3304
3305@item ~%
3306Insert a newline.
3307
3308@item ~~
3309Insert a tilde.
3310@end table
3311
3312This procedure is the same as calling @code{simple-format} (@pxref{Writing})
3313with @code{#f} as the destination.
3314@end deffn
3315
620c8965
LC
3316@node SRFI-30
3317@subsection SRFI-30 - Nested Multi-line Comments
3318@cindex SRFI-30
3319
3320Starting from version 2.0, Guile's @code{read} supports SRFI-30/R6RS
3321nested multi-line comments by default, @ref{Block Comments}.
3322
8638c417
RB
3323@node SRFI-31
3324@subsection SRFI-31 - A special form `rec' for recursive evaluation
3325@cindex SRFI-31
7c2e18cd 3326@cindex recursive expression
8638c417
RB
3327@findex rec
3328
3329SRFI-31 defines a special form that can be used to create
3330self-referential expressions more conveniently. The syntax is as
3331follows:
3332
3333@example
3334@group
3335<rec expression> --> (rec <variable> <expression>)
3336<rec expression> --> (rec (<variable>+) <body>)
3337@end group
3338@end example
3339
3340The first syntax can be used to create self-referential expressions,
3341for example:
3342
3343@lisp
3344 guile> (define tmp (rec ones (cons 1 (delay ones))))
3345@end lisp
3346
3347The second syntax can be used to create anonymous recursive functions:
3348
3349@lisp
3350 guile> (define tmp (rec (display-n item n)
3351 (if (positive? n)
3352 (begin (display n) (display-n (- n 1))))))
3353 guile> (tmp 42 3)
3354 424242
3355 guile>
3356@end lisp
12991fed 3357
eeadfda1 3358
f50ca8da
LC
3359@node SRFI-34
3360@subsection SRFI-34 - Exception handling for programs
3361
3362@cindex SRFI-34
3363Guile provides an implementation of
3364@uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-34/srfi-34.html, SRFI-34's exception
3365handling mechanisms} as an alternative to its own built-in mechanisms
3366(@pxref{Exceptions}). It can be made available as follows:
3367
3368@lisp
3369(use-modules (srfi srfi-34))
3370@end lisp
3371
3372@c FIXME: Document it.
3373
3374
3375@node SRFI-35
3376@subsection SRFI-35 - Conditions
3377
3378@cindex SRFI-35
3379@cindex conditions
3380@cindex exceptions
3381
3382@uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-35/srfi-35.html, SRFI-35} implements
3383@dfn{conditions}, a data structure akin to records designed to convey
3384information about exceptional conditions between parts of a program. It
3385is normally used in conjunction with SRFI-34's @code{raise}:
3386
3387@lisp
3388(raise (condition (&message
3389 (message "An error occurred"))))
3390@end lisp
3391
3392Users can define @dfn{condition types} containing arbitrary information.
3393Condition types may inherit from one another. This allows the part of
3394the program that handles (or ``catches'') conditions to get accurate
3395information about the exceptional condition that arose.
3396
3397SRFI-35 conditions are made available using:
3398
3399@lisp
3400(use-modules (srfi srfi-35))
3401@end lisp
3402
3403The procedures available to manipulate condition types are the
3404following:
3405
3406@deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-condition-type id parent field-names
3407Return a new condition type named @var{id}, inheriting from
3408@var{parent}, and with the fields whose names are listed in
3409@var{field-names}. @var{field-names} must be a list of symbols and must
3410not contain names already used by @var{parent} or one of its supertypes.
3411@end deffn
3412
3413@deffn {Scheme Procedure} condition-type? obj
3414Return true if @var{obj} is a condition type.
3415@end deffn
3416
3417Conditions can be created and accessed with the following procedures:
3418
3419@deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-condition type . field+value
3420Return a new condition of type @var{type} with fields initialized as
3421specified by @var{field+value}, a sequence of field names (symbols) and
3422values as in the following example:
3423
3424@lisp
1317062f 3425(let ((&ct (make-condition-type 'foo &condition '(a b c))))
f50ca8da
LC
3426 (make-condition &ct 'a 1 'b 2 'c 3))
3427@end lisp
3428
3429Note that all fields of @var{type} and its supertypes must be specified.
3430@end deffn
3431
df0a1002 3432@deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-compound-condition condition1 condition2 @dots{}
994d87be
BT
3433Return a new compound condition composed of @var{condition1}
3434@var{condition2} @enddots{}. The returned condition has the type of
3435each condition of condition1 condition2 @dots{} (per
3436@code{condition-has-type?}).
f50ca8da
LC
3437@end deffn
3438
3439@deffn {Scheme Procedure} condition-has-type? c type
3440Return true if condition @var{c} has type @var{type}.
3441@end deffn
3442
3443@deffn {Scheme Procedure} condition-ref c field-name
3444Return the value of the field named @var{field-name} from condition @var{c}.
3445
3446If @var{c} is a compound condition and several underlying condition
3447types contain a field named @var{field-name}, then the value of the
3448first such field is returned, using the order in which conditions were
64de6db5 3449passed to @code{make-compound-condition}.
f50ca8da
LC
3450@end deffn
3451
3452@deffn {Scheme Procedure} extract-condition c type
3453Return a condition of condition type @var{type} with the field values
3454specified by @var{c}.
3455
3456If @var{c} is a compound condition, extract the field values from the
3457subcondition belonging to @var{type} that appeared first in the call to
72b3aa56 3458@code{make-compound-condition} that created the condition.
f50ca8da
LC
3459@end deffn
3460
3461Convenience macros are also available to create condition types and
3462conditions.
3463
3464@deffn {library syntax} define-condition-type type supertype predicate field-spec...
3465Define a new condition type named @var{type} that inherits from
3466@var{supertype}. In addition, bind @var{predicate} to a type predicate
3467that returns true when passed a condition of type @var{type} or any of
3468its subtypes. @var{field-spec} must have the form @code{(field
3469accessor)} where @var{field} is the name of field of @var{type} and
3470@var{accessor} is the name of a procedure to access field @var{field} in
3471conditions of type @var{type}.
3472
3473The example below defines condition type @code{&foo}, inheriting from
3474@code{&condition} with fields @code{a}, @code{b} and @code{c}:
3475
3476@lisp
3477(define-condition-type &foo &condition
3478 foo-condition?
3479 (a foo-a)
3480 (b foo-b)
3481 (c foo-c))
3482@end lisp
3483@end deffn
3484
df0a1002
BT
3485@deffn {library syntax} condition type-field-binding1 type-field-binding2 @dots{}
3486Return a new condition or compound condition, initialized according to
3487@var{type-field-binding1} @var{type-field-binding2} @enddots{}. Each
3488@var{type-field-binding} must have the form @code{(type
3489field-specs...)}, where @var{type} is the name of a variable bound to a
3490condition type; each @var{field-spec} must have the form
3491@code{(field-name value)} where @var{field-name} is a symbol denoting
3492the field being initialized to @var{value}. As for
f50ca8da
LC
3493@code{make-condition}, all fields must be specified.
3494
3495The following example returns a simple condition:
3496
3497@lisp
3498(condition (&message (message "An error occurred")))
3499@end lisp
3500
3501The one below returns a compound condition:
3502
3503@lisp
3504(condition (&message (message "An error occurred"))
3505 (&serious))
3506@end lisp
3507@end deffn
3508
3509Finally, SRFI-35 defines a several standard condition types.
3510
3511@defvar &condition
3512This condition type is the root of all condition types. It has no
3513fields.
3514@end defvar
3515
3516@defvar &message
3517A condition type that carries a message describing the nature of the
3518condition to humans.
3519@end defvar
3520
3521@deffn {Scheme Procedure} message-condition? c
3522Return true if @var{c} is of type @code{&message} or one of its
3523subtypes.
3524@end deffn
3525
3526@deffn {Scheme Procedure} condition-message c
3527Return the message associated with message condition @var{c}.
3528@end deffn
3529
3530@defvar &serious
3531This type describes conditions serious enough that they cannot safely be
3532ignored. It has no fields.
3533@end defvar
3534
3535@deffn {Scheme Procedure} serious-condition? c
3536Return true if @var{c} is of type @code{&serious} or one of its
3537subtypes.
3538@end deffn
3539
3540@defvar &error
3541This condition describes errors, typically caused by something that has
3542gone wrong in the interaction of the program with the external world or
3543the user.
3544@end defvar
3545
3546@deffn {Scheme Procedure} error? c
3547Return true if @var{c} is of type @code{&error} or one of its subtypes.
3548@end deffn
3549
d4c38221
LC
3550@node SRFI-37
3551@subsection SRFI-37 - args-fold
3552@cindex SRFI-37
3553
3554This is a processor for GNU @code{getopt_long}-style program
3555arguments. It provides an alternative, less declarative interface
3556than @code{getopt-long} in @code{(ice-9 getopt-long)}
3557(@pxref{getopt-long,,The (ice-9 getopt-long) Module}). Unlike
3558@code{getopt-long}, it supports repeated options and any number of
3559short and long names per option. Access it with:
3560
3561@lisp
3562(use-modules (srfi srfi-37))
3563@end lisp
3564
3565@acronym{SRFI}-37 principally provides an @code{option} type and the
3566@code{args-fold} function. To use the library, create a set of
3567options with @code{option} and use it as a specification for invoking
3568@code{args-fold}.
3569
3570Here is an example of a simple argument processor for the typical
3571@samp{--version} and @samp{--help} options, which returns a backwards
3572list of files given on the command line:
3573
3574@lisp
3575(args-fold (cdr (program-arguments))
3576 (let ((display-and-exit-proc
3577 (lambda (msg)
3578 (lambda (opt name arg loads)
3579 (display msg) (quit)))))
3580 (list (option '(#\v "version") #f #f
3581 (display-and-exit-proc "Foo version 42.0\n"))
3582 (option '(#\h "help") #f #f
3583 (display-and-exit-proc
3584 "Usage: foo scheme-file ..."))))
3585 (lambda (opt name arg loads)
3586 (error "Unrecognized option `~A'" name))
3587 (lambda (op loads) (cons op loads))
3588 '())
3589@end lisp
3590
3591@deffn {Scheme Procedure} option names required-arg? optional-arg? processor
3592Return an object that specifies a single kind of program option.
3593
3594@var{names} is a list of command-line option names, and should consist of
3595characters for traditional @code{getopt} short options and strings for
3596@code{getopt_long}-style long options.
3597
3598@var{required-arg?} and @var{optional-arg?} are mutually exclusive;
3599one or both must be @code{#f}. If @var{required-arg?}, the option
3600must be followed by an argument on the command line, such as
3601@samp{--opt=value} for long options, or an error will be signalled.
3602If @var{optional-arg?}, an argument will be taken if available.
3603
3604@var{processor} is a procedure that takes at least 3 arguments, called
3605when @code{args-fold} encounters the option: the containing option
3606object, the name used on the command line, and the argument given for
3607the option (or @code{#f} if none). The rest of the arguments are
3608@code{args-fold} ``seeds'', and the @var{processor} should return
3609seeds as well.
3610@end deffn
3611
3612@deffn {Scheme Procedure} option-names opt
3613@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} option-required-arg? opt
3614@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} option-optional-arg? opt
3615@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} option-processor opt
3616Return the specified field of @var{opt}, an option object, as
3617described above for @code{option}.
3618@end deffn
3619
df0a1002
BT
3620@deffn {Scheme Procedure} args-fold args options unrecognized-option-proc operand-proc seed @dots{}
3621Process @var{args}, a list of program arguments such as that returned by
3622@code{(cdr (program-arguments))}, in order against @var{options}, a list
3623of option objects as described above. All functions called take the
3624``seeds'', or the last multiple-values as multiple arguments, starting
3625with @var{seed} @dots{}, and must return the new seeds. Return the
d4c38221
LC
3626final seeds.
3627
3628Call @code{unrecognized-option-proc}, which is like an option object's
3629processor, for any options not found in @var{options}.
3630
3631Call @code{operand-proc} with any items on the command line that are
3632not named options. This includes arguments after @samp{--}. It is
3633called with the argument in question, as well as the seeds.
3634@end deffn
3635
12708eeb
AR
3636@node SRFI-38
3637@subsection SRFI-38 - External Representation for Data With Shared Structure
3638@cindex SRFI-38
3639
3640This subsection is based on
3641@uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-38/srfi-38.html, the specification
3642of SRFI-38} written by Ray Dillinger.
3643
3644@c Copyright (C) Ray Dillinger 2003. All Rights Reserved.
3645
3646@c Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
3647@c copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
3648@c "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
3649@c without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
3650@c distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
3651@c permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
3652@c the following conditions:
3653
3654@c The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
3655@c in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
3656
3657@c THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
3658@c OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
3659@c MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
3660@c NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
3661@c LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
3662@c OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
3663@c WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
3664
3665This SRFI creates an alternative external representation for data
3666written and read using @code{write-with-shared-structure} and
3667@code{read-with-shared-structure}. It is identical to the grammar for
3668external representation for data written and read with @code{write} and
3669@code{read} given in section 7 of R5RS, except that the single
3670production
3671
3672@example
3673<datum> --> <simple datum> | <compound datum>
3674@end example
3675
3676is replaced by the following five productions:
3677
3678@example
3679<datum> --> <defining datum> | <nondefining datum> | <defined datum>
3680<defining datum> --> #<indexnum>=<nondefining datum>
3681<defined datum> --> #<indexnum>#
3682<nondefining datum> --> <simple datum> | <compound datum>
3683<indexnum> --> <digit 10>+
3684@end example
3685
3686@deffn {Scheme procedure} write-with-shared-structure obj
3687@deffnx {Scheme procedure} write-with-shared-structure obj port
3688@deffnx {Scheme procedure} write-with-shared-structure obj port optarg
3689
3690Writes an external representation of @var{obj} to the given port.
3691Strings that appear in the written representation are enclosed in
3692doublequotes, and within those strings backslash and doublequote
3693characters are escaped by backslashes. Character objects are written
3694using the @code{#\} notation.
3695
3696Objects which denote locations rather than values (cons cells, vectors,
3697and non-zero-length strings in R5RS scheme; also Guile's structs,
3698bytevectors and ports and hash-tables), if they appear at more than one
3699point in the data being written, are preceded by @samp{#@var{N}=} the
3700first time they are written and replaced by @samp{#@var{N}#} all
3701subsequent times they are written, where @var{N} is a natural number
3702used to identify that particular object. If objects which denote
3703locations occur only once in the structure, then
3704@code{write-with-shared-structure} must produce the same external
3705representation for those objects as @code{write}.
3706
3707@code{write-with-shared-structure} terminates in finite time and
3708produces a finite representation when writing finite data.
3709
3710@code{write-with-shared-structure} returns an unspecified value. The
3711@var{port} argument may be omitted, in which case it defaults to the
3712value returned by @code{(current-output-port)}. The @var{optarg}
3713argument may also be omitted. If present, its effects on the output and
3714return value are unspecified but @code{write-with-shared-structure} must
3715still write a representation that can be read by
3716@code{read-with-shared-structure}. Some implementations may wish to use
3717@var{optarg} to specify formatting conventions, numeric radixes, or
3718return values. Guile's implementation ignores @var{optarg}.
3719
3720For example, the code
3721
3722@lisp
3723(begin (define a (cons 'val1 'val2))
3724 (set-cdr! a a)
3725 (write-with-shared-structure a))
3726@end lisp
3727
3728should produce the output @code{#1=(val1 . #1#)}. This shows a cons
3729cell whose @code{cdr} contains itself.
3730
3731@end deffn
3732
3733@deffn {Scheme procedure} read-with-shared-structure
3734@deffnx {Scheme procedure} read-with-shared-structure port
3735
3736@code{read-with-shared-structure} converts the external representations
3737of Scheme objects produced by @code{write-with-shared-structure} into
3738Scheme objects. That is, it is a parser for the nonterminal
3739@samp{<datum>} in the augmented external representation grammar defined
3740above. @code{read-with-shared-structure} returns the next object
3741parsable from the given input port, updating @var{port} to point to the
3742first character past the end of the external representation of the
3743object.
3744
3745If an end-of-file is encountered in the input before any characters are
3746found that can begin an object, then an end-of-file object is returned.
3747The port remains open, and further attempts to read it (by
3748@code{read-with-shared-structure} or @code{read} will also return an
3749end-of-file object. If an end of file is encountered after the
3750beginning of an object's external representation, but the external
3751representation is incomplete and therefore not parsable, an error is
3752signalled.
3753
3754The @var{port} argument may be omitted, in which case it defaults to the
3755value returned by @code{(current-input-port)}. It is an error to read
3756from a closed port.
3757
3758@end deffn
d4c38221 3759
eeadfda1
KR
3760@node SRFI-39
3761@subsection SRFI-39 - Parameters
3762@cindex SRFI-39
eeadfda1 3763
99db1bc2
AW
3764This SRFI adds support for dynamically-scoped parameters. SRFI 39 is
3765implemented in the Guile core; there's no module needed to get SRFI-39
3766itself. Parameters are documented in @ref{Parameters}.
eeadfda1 3767
99db1bc2
AW
3768This module does export one extra function: @code{with-parameters*}.
3769This is a Guile-specific addition to the SRFI, similar to the core
3770@code{with-fluids*} (@pxref{Fluids and Dynamic States}).
eeadfda1
KR
3771
3772@defun with-parameters* param-list value-list thunk
3773Establish a new dynamic scope, as per @code{parameterize} above,
3774taking parameters from @var{param-list} and corresponding values from
64de6db5 3775@var{value-list}. A call @code{(@var{thunk})} is made in the new
eeadfda1
KR
3776scope and the result from that @var{thunk} is the return from
3777@code{with-parameters*}.
eeadfda1
KR
3778@end defun
3779
50d08cd8
CJY
3780@node SRFI-41
3781@subsection SRFI-41 - Streams
3782@cindex SRFI-41
3783
80b809f1
MW
3784This subsection is based on the
3785@uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-41/srfi-41.html, specification of
3786SRFI-41} by Philip L.@: Bewig.
3787
3788@c The copyright notice and license text of the SRFI-41 specification is
3789@c reproduced below:
3790
3791@c Copyright (C) Philip L. Bewig (2007). All Rights Reserved.
3792
3793@c Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
3794@c copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
3795@c "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
3796@c without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
3797@c distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
3798@c permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
3799@c the following conditions:
3800
3801@c The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
3802@c in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
3803
3804@c THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
3805@c OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
3806@c MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
3807@c NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
3808@c LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
3809@c OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
3810@c WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
3811
3812@noindent
3813This SRFI implements streams, sometimes called lazy lists, a sequential
3814data structure containing elements computed only on demand. A stream is
3815either null or is a pair with a stream in its cdr. Since elements of a
3816stream are computed only when accessed, streams can be infinite. Once
3817computed, the value of a stream element is cached in case it is needed
3818again. SRFI-41 can be made available with:
3819
3820@example
3821(use-modules (srfi srfi-41))
3822@end example
3823
3824@menu
3825* SRFI-41 Stream Fundamentals::
3826* SRFI-41 Stream Primitives::
3827* SRFI-41 Stream Library::
3828@end menu
3829
3830@node SRFI-41 Stream Fundamentals
3831@subsubsection SRFI-41 Stream Fundamentals
3832
3833SRFI-41 Streams are based on two mutually-recursive abstract data types:
3834An object of the @code{stream} abstract data type is a promise that,
0ddf484d 3835when forced, is either @code{stream-null} or is an object of type
80b809f1
MW
3836@code{stream-pair}. An object of the @code{stream-pair} abstract data
3837type contains a @code{stream-car} and a @code{stream-cdr}, which must be
3838a @code{stream}. The essential feature of streams is the systematic
3839suspensions of the recursive promises between the two data types.
3840
3841The object stored in the @code{stream-car} of a @code{stream-pair} is a
3842promise that is forced the first time the @code{stream-car} is accessed;
3843its value is cached in case it is needed again. The object may have any
3844type, and different stream elements may have different types. If the
3845@code{stream-car} is never accessed, the object stored there is never
3846evaluated. Likewise, the @code{stream-cdr} is a promise to return a
3847stream, and is only forced on demand.
3848
3849@node SRFI-41 Stream Primitives
3850@subsubsection SRFI-41 Stream Primitives
3851
3852This library provides eight operators: constructors for
0ddf484d 3853@code{stream-null} and @code{stream-pair}s, type predicates for streams
80b809f1
MW
3854and the two kinds of streams, accessors for both fields of a
3855@code{stream-pair}, and a lambda that creates procedures that return
3856streams.
3857
7bfbd293 3858@defvr {Scheme Variable} stream-null
80b809f1 3859A promise that, when forced, is a single object, distinguishable from
0ddf484d 3860all other objects, that represents the null stream. @code{stream-null}
80b809f1 3861is immutable and unique.
7bfbd293 3862@end defvr
80b809f1
MW
3863
3864@deffn {Scheme Syntax} stream-cons object-expr stream-expr
3865Creates a newly-allocated stream containing a promise that, when forced,
3866is a @code{stream-pair} with @var{object-expr} in its @code{stream-car}
3867and @var{stream-expr} in its @code{stream-cdr}. Neither
3868@var{object-expr} nor @var{stream-expr} is evaluated when
3869@code{stream-cons} is called.
3870
3871Once created, a @code{stream-pair} is immutable; there is no
3872@code{stream-set-car!} or @code{stream-set-cdr!} that modifies an
3873existing stream-pair. There is no dotted-pair or improper stream as
3874with lists.
3875@end deffn
3876
3877@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream? object
3878Returns true if @var{object} is a stream, otherwise returns false. If
3879@var{object} is a stream, its promise will not be forced. If
3880@code{(stream? obj)} returns true, then one of @code{(stream-null? obj)}
3881or @code{(stream-pair? obj)} will return true and the other will return
3882false.
3883@end deffn
3884
3885@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-null? object
3886Returns true if @var{object} is the distinguished null stream, otherwise
3887returns false. If @var{object} is a stream, its promise will be forced.
3888@end deffn
3889
3890@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-pair? object
3891Returns true if @var{object} is a @code{stream-pair} constructed by
3892@code{stream-cons}, otherwise returns false. If @var{object} is a
3893stream, its promise will be forced.
3894@end deffn
3895
3896@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-car stream
3897Returns the object stored in the @code{stream-car} of @var{stream}. An
3898error is signalled if the argument is not a @code{stream-pair}. This
3899causes the @var{object-expr} passed to @code{stream-cons} to be
3900evaluated if it had not yet been; the value is cached in case it is
3901needed again.
3902@end deffn
3903
3904@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-cdr stream
3905Returns the stream stored in the @code{stream-cdr} of @var{stream}. An
3906error is signalled if the argument is not a @code{stream-pair}.
3907@end deffn
3908
3909@deffn {Scheme Syntax} stream-lambda formals body @dots{}
3910Creates a procedure that returns a promise to evaluate the @var{body} of
3911the procedure. The last @var{body} expression to be evaluated must
3912yield a stream. As with normal @code{lambda}, @var{formals} may be a
3913single variable name, in which case all the formal arguments are
3914collected into a single list, or a list of variable names, which may be
3915null if there are no arguments, proper if there are an exact number of
3916arguments, or dotted if a fixed number of arguments is to be followed by
3917zero or more arguments collected into a list. @var{Body} must contain
3918at least one expression, and may contain internal definitions preceding
3919any expressions to be evaluated.
3920@end deffn
3921
3922@example
3923(define strm123
3924 (stream-cons 1
3925 (stream-cons 2
3926 (stream-cons 3
3927 stream-null))))
3928
3929(stream-car strm123) @result{} 1
3930(stream-car (stream-cdr strm123) @result{} 2
3931
3932(stream-pair?
3933 (stream-cdr
3934 (stream-cons (/ 1 0) stream-null))) @result{} #f
3935
3936(stream? (list 1 2 3)) @result{} #f
3937
3938(define iter
3939 (stream-lambda (f x)
3940 (stream-cons x (iter f (f x)))))
3941
3942(define nats (iter (lambda (x) (+ x 1)) 0))
3943
3944(stream-car (stream-cdr nats)) @result{} 1
3945
3946(define stream-add
3947 (stream-lambda (s1 s2)
3948 (stream-cons
3949 (+ (stream-car s1) (stream-car s2))
3950 (stream-add (stream-cdr s1)
3951 (stream-cdr s2)))))
3952
3953(define evens (stream-add nats nats))
3954
3955(stream-car evens) @result{} 0
3956(stream-car (stream-cdr evens)) @result{} 2
3957(stream-car (stream-cdr (stream-cdr evens))) @result{} 4
3958@end example
3959
3960@node SRFI-41 Stream Library
3961@subsubsection SRFI-41 Stream Library
3962
3963@deffn {Scheme Syntax} define-stream (name args @dots{}) body @dots{}
3964Creates a procedure that returns a stream, and may appear anywhere a
3965normal @code{define} may appear, including as an internal definition.
3966It may contain internal definitions of its own. The defined procedure
3967takes arguments in the same way as @code{stream-lambda}.
3968@code{define-stream} is syntactic sugar on @code{stream-lambda}; see
3969also @code{stream-let}, which is also a sugaring of
3970@code{stream-lambda}.
3971
3972A simple version of @code{stream-map} that takes only a single input
3973stream calls itself recursively:
3974
3975@example
3976(define-stream (stream-map proc strm)
3977 (if (stream-null? strm)
3978 stream-null
3979 (stream-cons
3980 (proc (stream-car strm))
3981 (stream-map proc (stream-cdr strm))))))
3982@end example
3983@end deffn
3984
3985@deffn {Scheme Procedure} list->stream list
3986Returns a newly-allocated stream containing the elements from
3987@var{list}.
3988@end deffn
3989
3990@deffn {Scheme Procedure} port->stream [port]
3991Returns a newly-allocated stream containing in its elements the
3992characters on the port. If @var{port} is not given it defaults to the
3993current input port. The returned stream has finite length and is
0ddf484d 3994terminated by @code{stream-null}.
80b809f1
MW
3995
3996It looks like one use of @code{port->stream} would be this:
3997
3998@example
3999(define s ;wrong!
4000 (with-input-from-file filename
4001 (lambda () (port->stream))))
4002@end example
4003
4004But that fails, because @code{with-input-from-file} is eager, and closes
4005the input port prematurely, before the first character is read. To read
4006a file into a stream, say:
4007
4008@example
4009(define-stream (file->stream filename)
4010 (let ((p (open-input-file filename)))
4011 (stream-let loop ((c (read-char p)))
4012 (if (eof-object? c)
4013 (begin (close-input-port p)
4014 stream-null)
4015 (stream-cons c
4016 (loop (read-char p)))))))
4017@end example
4018@end deffn
4019
4020@deffn {Scheme Syntax} stream object-expr @dots{}
4021Creates a newly-allocated stream containing in its elements the objects,
4022in order. The @var{object-expr}s are evaluated when they are accessed,
4023not when the stream is created. If no objects are given, as in
4024(stream), the null stream is returned. See also @code{list->stream}.
4025
4026@example
4027(define strm123 (stream 1 2 3))
4028
4029; (/ 1 0) not evaluated when stream is created
4030(define s (stream 1 (/ 1 0) -1))
4031@end example
4032@end deffn
4033
4034@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream->list [n] stream
4035Returns a newly-allocated list containing in its elements the first
4036@var{n} items in @var{stream}. If @var{stream} has less than @var{n}
4037items, all the items in the stream will be included in the returned
4038list. If @var{n} is not given it defaults to infinity, which means that
4039unless @var{stream} is finite @code{stream->list} will never return.
4040
4041@example
4042(stream->list 10
4043 (stream-map (lambda (x) (* x x))
4044 (stream-from 0)))
4045 @result{} (0 1 4 9 16 25 36 49 64 81)
4046@end example
4047@end deffn
4048
4049@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-append stream @dots{}
4050Returns a newly-allocated stream containing in its elements those
4051elements contained in its input @var{stream}s, in order of input. If
4052any of the input streams is infinite, no elements of any of the
4053succeeding input streams will appear in the output stream. See also
4054@code{stream-concat}.
4055@end deffn
4056
4057@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-concat stream
4058Takes a @var{stream} consisting of one or more streams and returns a
4059newly-allocated stream containing all the elements of the input streams.
4060If any of the streams in the input @var{stream} is infinite, any
4061remaining streams in the input stream will never appear in the output
4062stream. See also @code{stream-append}.
4063@end deffn
4064
4065@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-constant object @dots{}
4066Returns a newly-allocated stream containing in its elements the
4067@var{object}s, repeating in succession forever.
4068
4069@example
4070(stream-constant 1) @result{} 1 1 1 @dots{}
4071(stream-constant #t #f) @result{} #t #f #t #f #t #f @dots{}
4072@end example
4073@end deffn
4074
4075@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-drop n stream
4076Returns the suffix of the input @var{stream} that starts at the next
4077element after the first @var{n} elements. The output stream shares
4078structure with the input @var{stream}; thus, promises forced in one
4079instance of the stream are also forced in the other instance of the
4080stream. If the input @var{stream} has less than @var{n} elements,
4081@code{stream-drop} returns the null stream. See also
4082@code{stream-take}.
4083@end deffn
4084
4085@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-drop-while pred stream
4086Returns the suffix of the input @var{stream} that starts at the first
4087element @var{x} for which @code{(pred x)} returns false. The output
4088stream shares structure with the input @var{stream}. See also
4089@code{stream-take-while}.
4090@end deffn
4091
4092@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-filter pred stream
4093Returns a newly-allocated stream that contains only those elements
4094@var{x} of the input @var{stream} which satisfy the predicate
4095@code{pred}.
4096
4097@example
4098(stream-filter odd? (stream-from 0))
4099 @result{} 1 3 5 7 9 @dots{}
4100@end example
4101@end deffn
4102
4103@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-fold proc base stream
4104Applies a binary procedure @var{proc} to @var{base} and the first
4105element of @var{stream} to compute a new @var{base}, then applies the
4106procedure to the new @var{base} and the next element of @var{stream} to
4107compute a succeeding @var{base}, and so on, accumulating a value that is
4108finally returned as the value of @code{stream-fold} when the end of the
4109stream is reached. @var{stream} must be finite, or @code{stream-fold}
4110will enter an infinite loop. See also @code{stream-scan}, which is
4111similar to @code{stream-fold}, but useful for infinite streams. For
4112readers familiar with other functional languages, this is a left-fold;
4113there is no corresponding right-fold, since right-fold relies on finite
4114streams that are fully-evaluated, in which case they may as well be
4115converted to a list.
4116@end deffn
4117
4118@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-for-each proc stream @dots{}
4119Applies @var{proc} element-wise to corresponding elements of the input
4120@var{stream}s for side-effects; it returns nothing.
4121@code{stream-for-each} stops as soon as any of its input streams is
4122exhausted.
4123@end deffn
4124
4125@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-from first [step]
4126Creates a newly-allocated stream that contains @var{first} as its first
4127element and increments each succeeding element by @var{step}. If
4128@var{step} is not given it defaults to 1. @var{first} and @var{step}
4129may be of any numeric type. @code{stream-from} is frequently useful as
4130a generator in @code{stream-of} expressions. See also
4131@code{stream-range} for a similar procedure that creates finite streams.
4132@end deffn
4133
4134@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-iterate proc base
4135Creates a newly-allocated stream containing @var{base} in its first
4136element and applies @var{proc} to each element in turn to determine the
4137succeeding element. See also @code{stream-unfold} and
4138@code{stream-unfolds}.
4139@end deffn
4140
4141@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-length stream
4142Returns the number of elements in the @var{stream}; it does not evaluate
4143its elements. @code{stream-length} may only be used on finite streams;
4144it enters an infinite loop with infinite streams.
4145@end deffn
4146
4147@deffn {Scheme Syntax} stream-let tag ((var expr) @dots{}) body @dots{}
4148Creates a local scope that binds each variable to the value of its
4149corresponding expression. It additionally binds @var{tag} to a
4150procedure which takes the bound variables as arguments and @var{body} as
4151its defining expressions, binding the @var{tag} with
4152@code{stream-lambda}. @var{tag} is in scope within body, and may be
4153called recursively. When the expanded expression defined by the
4154@code{stream-let} is evaluated, @code{stream-let} evaluates the
4155expressions in its @var{body} in an environment containing the
4156newly-bound variables, returning the value of the last expression
4157evaluated, which must yield a stream.
4158
4159@code{stream-let} provides syntactic sugar on @code{stream-lambda}, in
4160the same manner as normal @code{let} provides syntactic sugar on normal
4161@code{lambda}. However, unlike normal @code{let}, the @var{tag} is
4162required, not optional, because unnamed @code{stream-let} is
4163meaningless.
4164
4165For example, @code{stream-member} returns the first @code{stream-pair}
4166of the input @var{strm} with a @code{stream-car} @var{x} that satisfies
4167@code{(eql? obj x)}, or the null stream if @var{x} is not present in
4168@var{strm}.
4169
4170@example
4171(define-stream (stream-member eql? obj strm)
4172 (stream-let loop ((strm strm))
4173 (cond ((stream-null? strm) strm)
4174 ((eql? obj (stream-car strm)) strm)
4175 (else (loop (stream-cdr strm))))))
4176@end example
4177@end deffn
4178
4179@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-map proc stream @dots{}
4180Applies @var{proc} element-wise to corresponding elements of the input
4181@var{stream}s, returning a newly-allocated stream containing elements
4182that are the results of those procedure applications. The output stream
4183has as many elements as the minimum-length input stream, and may be
4184infinite.
4185@end deffn
4186
4187@deffn {Scheme Syntax} stream-match stream clause @dots{}
4188Provides pattern-matching for streams. The input @var{stream} is an
4189expression that evaluates to a stream. Clauses are of the form
4190@code{(pattern [fender] expression)}, consisting of a @var{pattern} that
4191matches a stream of a particular shape, an optional @var{fender} that
4192must succeed if the pattern is to match, and an @var{expression} that is
4193evaluated if the pattern matches. There are four types of patterns:
4194
4195@itemize @bullet
4196@item
4197() matches the null stream.
4198
4199@item
4200(@var{pat0} @var{pat1} @dots{}) matches a finite stream with length
4201exactly equal to the number of pattern elements.
4202
4203@item
4204(@var{pat0} @var{pat1} @dots{} @code{.} @var{pat-rest}) matches an
4205infinite stream, or a finite stream with length at least as great as the
4206number of pattern elements before the literal dot.
4207
4208@item
4209@var{pat} matches an entire stream. Should always appear last in the
4210list of clauses; it's not an error to appear elsewhere, but subsequent
4211clauses could never match.
4212@end itemize
4213
4214Each pattern element may be either:
4215
4216@itemize @bullet
4217@item
4218An identifier, which matches any stream element. Additionally, the
4219value of the stream element is bound to the variable named by the
4220identifier, which is in scope in the @var{fender} and @var{expression}
4221of the corresponding @var{clause}. Each identifier in a single pattern
4222must be unique.
4223
4224@item
4225A literal underscore (@code{_}), which matches any stream element but
4226creates no bindings.
4227@end itemize
4228
4229The @var{pattern}s are tested in order, left-to-right, until a matching
4230pattern is found; if @var{fender} is present, it must evaluate to a true
4231value for the match to be successful. Pattern variables are bound in
4232the corresponding @var{fender} and @var{expression}. Once the matching
4233@var{pattern} is found, the corresponding @var{expression} is evaluated
4234and returned as the result of the match. An error is signaled if no
4235pattern matches the input @var{stream}.
4236
4237@code{stream-match} is often used to distinguish null streams from
4238non-null streams, binding @var{head} and @var{tail}:
4239
4240@example
4241(define (len strm)
4242 (stream-match strm
4243 (() 0)
4244 ((head . tail) (+ 1 (len tail)))))
4245@end example
4246
4247Fenders can test the common case where two stream elements must be
4248identical; the @code{else} pattern is an identifier bound to the entire
4249stream, not a keyword as in @code{cond}.
4250
4251@example
4252(stream-match strm
4253 ((x y . _) (equal? x y) 'ok)
4254 (else 'error))
4255@end example
4256
4257A more complex example uses two nested matchers to match two different
4258stream arguments; @code{(stream-merge lt? . strms)} stably merges two or
4259more streams ordered by the @code{lt?} predicate:
4260
4261@example
4262(define-stream (stream-merge lt? . strms)
4263 (define-stream (merge xx yy)
4264 (stream-match xx (() yy) ((x . xs)
4265 (stream-match yy (() xx) ((y . ys)
4266 (if (lt? y x)
4267 (stream-cons y (merge xx ys))
4268 (stream-cons x (merge xs yy))))))))
4269 (stream-let loop ((strms strms))
4270 (cond ((null? strms) stream-null)
4271 ((null? (cdr strms)) (car strms))
4272 (else (merge (car strms)
4273 (apply stream-merge lt?
4274 (cdr strms)))))))
4275@end example
4276@end deffn
4277
4278@deffn {Scheme Syntax} stream-of expr clause @dots{}
4279Provides the syntax of stream comprehensions, which generate streams by
4280means of looping expressions. The result is a stream of objects of the
4281type returned by @var{expr}. There are four types of clauses:
4282
4283@itemize @bullet
4284@item
4285(@var{var} @code{in} @var{stream-expr}) loops over the elements of
4286@var{stream-expr}, in order from the start of the stream, binding each
4287element of the stream in turn to @var{var}. @code{stream-from} and
4288@code{stream-range} are frequently useful as generators for
4289@var{stream-expr}.
4290
4291@item
4292(@var{var} @code{is} @var{expr}) binds @var{var} to the value obtained
4293by evaluating @var{expr}.
4294
4295@item
4296(@var{pred} @var{expr}) includes in the output stream only those
4297elements @var{x} which satisfy the predicate @var{pred}.
4298@end itemize
4299
4300The scope of variables bound in the stream comprehension is the clauses
4301to the right of the binding clause (but not the binding clause itself)
4302plus the result expression.
4303
4304When two or more generators are present, the loops are processed as if
4305they are nested from left to right; that is, the rightmost generator
4306varies fastest. A consequence of this is that only the first generator
4307may be infinite and all subsequent generators must be finite. If no
4308generators are present, the result of a stream comprehension is a stream
4309containing the result expression; thus, @samp{(stream-of 1)} produces a
4310finite stream containing only the element 1.
4311
4312@example
4313(stream-of (* x x)
4314 (x in (stream-range 0 10))
4315 (even? x))
4316 @result{} 0 4 16 36 64
4317
4318(stream-of (list a b)
4319 (a in (stream-range 1 4))
4320 (b in (stream-range 1 3)))
4321 @result{} (1 1) (1 2) (2 1) (2 2) (3 1) (3 2)
4322
4323(stream-of (list i j)
4324 (i in (stream-range 1 5))
4325 (j in (stream-range (+ i 1) 5)))
4326 @result{} (1 2) (1 3) (1 4) (2 3) (2 4) (3 4)
4327@end example
4328@end deffn
4329
4330@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-range first past [step]
4331Creates a newly-allocated stream that contains @var{first} as its first
4332element and increments each succeeding element by @var{step}. The
4333stream is finite and ends before @var{past}, which is not an element of
4334the stream. If @var{step} is not given it defaults to 1 if @var{first}
4335is less than past and -1 otherwise. @var{first}, @var{past} and
4336@var{step} may be of any real numeric type. @code{stream-range} is
4337frequently useful as a generator in @code{stream-of} expressions. See
4338also @code{stream-from} for a similar procedure that creates infinite
4339streams.
4340
4341@example
4342(stream-range 0 10) @result{} 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
4343(stream-range 0 10 2) @result{} 0 2 4 6 8
4344@end example
4345
4346Successive elements of the stream are calculated by adding @var{step} to
4347@var{first}, so if any of @var{first}, @var{past} or @var{step} are
4348inexact, the length of the output stream may differ from
4349@code{(ceiling (- (/ (- past first) step) 1)}.
4350@end deffn
4351
4352@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-ref stream n
4353Returns the @var{n}th element of stream, counting from zero. An error
4354is signaled if @var{n} is greater than or equal to the length of stream.
4355
4356@example
4357(define (fact n)
4358 (stream-ref
4359 (stream-scan * 1 (stream-from 1))
4360 n))
4361@end example
4362@end deffn
4363
4364@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-reverse stream
4365Returns a newly-allocated stream containing the elements of the input
4366@var{stream} but in reverse order. @code{stream-reverse} may only be
4367used with finite streams; it enters an infinite loop with infinite
4368streams. @code{stream-reverse} does not force evaluation of the
4369elements of the stream.
4370@end deffn
4371
4372@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-scan proc base stream
4373Accumulates the partial folds of an input @var{stream} into a
4374newly-allocated output stream. The output stream is the @var{base}
4375followed by @code{(stream-fold proc base (stream-take i stream))} for
4376each of the first @var{i} elements of @var{stream}.
4377
4378@example
4379(stream-scan + 0 (stream-from 1))
4380 @result{} (stream 0 1 3 6 10 15 @dots{})
4381
4382(stream-scan * 1 (stream-from 1))
4383 @result{} (stream 1 1 2 6 24 120 @dots{})
4384@end example
4385@end deffn
4386
4387@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-take n stream
4388Returns a newly-allocated stream containing the first @var{n} elements
4389of the input @var{stream}. If the input @var{stream} has less than
4390@var{n} elements, so does the output stream. See also
4391@code{stream-drop}.
4392@end deffn
4393
4394@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-take-while pred stream
4395Takes a predicate and a @code{stream} and returns a newly-allocated
4396stream containing those elements @code{x} that form the maximal prefix
4397of the input stream which satisfy @var{pred}. See also
4398@code{stream-drop-while}.
4399@end deffn
4400
4401@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-unfold map pred gen base
4402The fundamental recursive stream constructor. It constructs a stream by
4403repeatedly applying @var{gen} to successive values of @var{base}, in the
4404manner of @code{stream-iterate}, then applying @var{map} to each of the
4405values so generated, appending each of the mapped values to the output
4406stream as long as @code{(pred? base)} returns a true value. See also
4407@code{stream-iterate} and @code{stream-unfolds}.
4408
4409The expression below creates the finite stream @samp{0 1 4 9 16 25 36 49
441064 81}. Initially the @var{base} is 0, which is less than 10, so
4411@var{map} squares the @var{base} and the mapped value becomes the first
4412element of the output stream. Then @var{gen} increments the @var{base}
4413by 1, so it becomes 1; this is less than 10, so @var{map} squares the
4414new @var{base} and 1 becomes the second element of the output stream.
4415And so on, until the base becomes 10, when @var{pred} stops the
4416recursion and stream-null ends the output stream.
4417
4418@example
4419(stream-unfold
4420 (lambda (x) (expt x 2)) ; map
4421 (lambda (x) (< x 10)) ; pred?
4422 (lambda (x) (+ x 1)) ; gen
4423 0) ; base
4424@end example
4425@end deffn
4426
4427@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-unfolds proc seed
4428Returns @var{n} newly-allocated streams containing those elements
4429produced by successive calls to the generator @var{proc}, which takes
4430the current @var{seed} as its argument and returns @var{n}+1 values
4431
4432(@var{proc} @var{seed}) @result{} @var{seed} @var{result_0} @dots{} @var{result_n-1}
4433
4434where the returned @var{seed} is the input @var{seed} to the next call
4435to the generator and @var{result_i} indicates how to produce the next
4436element of the @var{i}th result stream:
4437
4438@itemize @bullet
4439@item
4440(@var{value}): @var{value} is the next car of the result stream.
4441
4442@item
4443@code{#f}: no value produced by this iteration of the generator
4444@var{proc} for the result stream.
4445
4446@item
4447(): the end of the result stream.
4448@end itemize
4449
4450It may require multiple calls of @var{proc} to produce the next element
4451of any particular result stream. See also @code{stream-iterate} and
4452@code{stream-unfold}.
4453
4454@example
4455(define (stream-partition pred? strm)
4456 (stream-unfolds
4457 (lambda (s)
4458 (if (stream-null? s)
4459 (values s '() '())
4460 (let ((a (stream-car s))
4461 (d (stream-cdr s)))
4462 (if (pred? a)
4463 (values d (list a) #f)
4464 (values d #f (list a))))))
4465 strm))
4466
4467(call-with-values
4468 (lambda ()
4469 (stream-partition odd?
4470 (stream-range 1 6)))
4471 (lambda (odds evens)
4472 (list (stream->list odds)
4473 (stream->list evens))))
4474 @result{} ((1 3 5) (2 4))
4475@end example
4476@end deffn
4477
4478@deffn {Scheme Procedure} stream-zip stream @dots{}
4479Returns a newly-allocated stream in which each element is a list (not a
4480stream) of the corresponding elements of the input @var{stream}s. The
4481output stream is as long as the shortest input @var{stream}, if any of
4482the input @var{stream}s is finite, or is infinite if all the input
4483@var{stream}s are infinite.
4484@end deffn
50d08cd8 4485
fdc8fd46
AR
4486@node SRFI-42
4487@subsection SRFI-42 - Eager Comprehensions
4488@cindex SRFI-42
4489
4490See @uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-42/srfi-42.html, the
4491specification of SRFI-42}.
eeadfda1 4492
9060dc29
MW
4493@node SRFI-43
4494@subsection SRFI-43 - Vector Library
4495@cindex SRFI-43
4496
4497This subsection is based on the
4498@uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-43/srfi-43.html, specification of
4499SRFI-43} by Taylor Campbell.
4500
4501@c The copyright notice and license text of the SRFI-43 specification is
4502@c reproduced below:
4503
4504@c Copyright (C) Taylor Campbell (2003). All Rights Reserved.
4505
4506@c Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
4507@c copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
4508@c "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
4509@c without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
4510@c distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
4511@c permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
4512@c the following conditions:
4513
4514@c The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
4515@c in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
4516
4517@c THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
4518@c OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
4519@c MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
4520@c NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
4521@c LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
4522@c OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
4523@c WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
4524
4525@noindent
4526SRFI-43 implements a comprehensive library of vector operations. It can
4527be made available with:
4528
4529@example
4530(use-modules (srfi srfi-43))
4531@end example
4532
4533@menu
4534* SRFI-43 Constructors::
4535* SRFI-43 Predicates::
4536* SRFI-43 Selectors::
4537* SRFI-43 Iteration::
4538* SRFI-43 Searching::
4539* SRFI-43 Mutators::
4540* SRFI-43 Conversion::
4541@end menu
4542
4543@node SRFI-43 Constructors
4544@subsubsection SRFI-43 Constructors
4545
4546@deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-vector size [fill]
4547Create and return a vector of size @var{size}, optionally filling it
4548with @var{fill}. The default value of @var{fill} is unspecified.
4549
4550@example
4551(make-vector 5 3) @result{} #(3 3 3 3 3)
4552@end example
4553@end deffn
4554
4555@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector x @dots{}
4556Create and return a vector whose elements are @var{x} @enddots{}.
4557
4558@example
4559(vector 0 1 2 3 4) @result{} #(0 1 2 3 4)
4560@end example
4561@end deffn
4562
4563@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-unfold f length initial-seed @dots{}
ff4af3df
MW
4564The fundamental vector constructor. Create a vector whose length
4565is @var{length} and iterates across each index k from 0 up to
4566@var{length} - 1, applying @var{f} at each iteration to the current
4567index and current seeds, in that order, to receive n + 1 values: the
4568element to put in the kth slot of the new vector, and n new seeds for
9060dc29
MW
4569the next iteration. It is an error for the number of seeds to vary
4570between iterations.
4571
4572@example
4573(vector-unfold (lambda (i x) (values x (- x 1)))
4574 10 0)
4575@result{} #(0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 -6 -7 -8 -9)
4576
4577(vector-unfold values 10)
4578@result{} #(0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9)
4579@end example
4580@end deffn
4581
4582@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-unfold-right f length initial-seed @dots{}
4583Like @code{vector-unfold}, but it uses @var{f} to generate elements from
4584right-to-left, rather than left-to-right.
4585
4586@example
4587(vector-unfold-right (lambda (i x) (values x (+ x 1)))
4588 10 0)
4589@result{} #(9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0)
4590@end example
4591@end deffn
4592
4593@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-copy vec [start [end [fill]]]
4594Allocate a new vector whose length is @var{end} - @var{start} and fills
4595it with elements from @var{vec}, taking elements from @var{vec} starting
4596at index @var{start} and stopping at index @var{end}. @var{start}
4597defaults to 0 and @var{end} defaults to the value of
4598@code{(vector-length vec)}. If @var{end} extends beyond the length of
4599@var{vec}, the slots in the new vector that obviously cannot be filled
4600by elements from @var{vec} are filled with @var{fill}, whose default
4601value is unspecified.
4602
4603@example
4604(vector-copy '#(a b c d e f g h i))
4605@result{} #(a b c d e f g h i)
4606
4607(vector-copy '#(a b c d e f g h i) 6)
4608@result{} #(g h i)
4609
4610(vector-copy '#(a b c d e f g h i) 3 6)
4611@result{} #(d e f)
4612
4613(vector-copy '#(a b c d e f g h i) 6 12 'x)
4614@result{} #(g h i x x x)
4615@end example
4616@end deffn
4617
4618@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-reverse-copy vec [start [end]]
4619Like @code{vector-copy}, but it copies the elements in the reverse order
4620from @var{vec}.
4621
4622@example
4623(vector-reverse-copy '#(5 4 3 2 1 0) 1 5)
4624@result{} #(1 2 3 4)
4625@end example
4626@end deffn
4627
4628@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-append vec @dots{}
4629Return a newly allocated vector that contains all elements in order from
4630the subsequent locations in @var{vec} @enddots{}.
4631
4632@example
4633(vector-append '#(a) '#(b c d))
4634@result{} #(a b c d)
4635@end example
4636@end deffn
4637
4638@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-concatenate list-of-vectors
4639Append each vector in @var{list-of-vectors}. Equivalent to
4640@code{(apply vector-append list-of-vectors)}.
4641
4642@example
4643(vector-concatenate '(#(a b) #(c d)))
4644@result{} #(a b c d)
4645@end example
4646@end deffn
4647
4648@node SRFI-43 Predicates
4649@subsubsection SRFI-43 Predicates
4650
4651@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector? obj
4652Return true if @var{obj} is a vector, else return false.
4653@end deffn
4654
4655@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-empty? vec
4656Return true if @var{vec} is empty, i.e. its length is 0, else return
4657false.
4658@end deffn
4659
4660@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector= elt=? vec @dots{}
4661Return true if the vectors @var{vec} @dots{} have equal lengths and
4662equal elements according to @var{elt=?}. @var{elt=?} is always applied
4663to two arguments. Element comparison must be consistent with @code{eq?}
4664in the following sense: if @code{(eq? a b)} returns true, then
4665@code{(elt=? a b)} must also return true. The order in which
4666comparisons are performed is unspecified.
4667@end deffn
4668
4669@node SRFI-43 Selectors
4670@subsubsection SRFI-43 Selectors
4671
4672@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-ref vec i
2b509a2e
MW
4673Return the element at index @var{i} in @var{vec}. Indexing is based on
4674zero.
9060dc29
MW
4675@end deffn
4676
4677@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-length vec
4678Return the length of @var{vec}.
4679@end deffn
4680
4681@node SRFI-43 Iteration
4682@subsubsection SRFI-43 Iteration
4683
4684@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-fold kons knil vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4685The fundamental vector iterator. @var{kons} is iterated over each index
4686in all of the vectors, stopping at the end of the shortest; @var{kons}
4687is applied as
4688@smalllisp
4689(kons i state (vector-ref vec1 i) (vector-ref vec2 i) ...)
4690@end smalllisp
4691where @var{state} is the current state value, and @var{i} is the current
4692index. The current state value begins with @var{knil}, and becomes
4693whatever @var{kons} returned at the respective iteration. The iteration
4694is strictly left-to-right.
4695@end deffn
4696
4697@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-fold-right kons knil vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4698Similar to @code{vector-fold}, but it iterates right-to-left instead of
4699left-to-right.
4700@end deffn
4701
4702@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-map f vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4703Return a new vector of the shortest size of the vector arguments. Each
4704element at index i of the new vector is mapped from the old vectors by
4705@smalllisp
4706(f i (vector-ref vec1 i) (vector-ref vec2 i) ...)
4707@end smalllisp
4708The dynamic order of application of @var{f} is unspecified.
4709@end deffn
4710
4711@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-map! f vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4712Similar to @code{vector-map}, but rather than mapping the new elements
4713into a new vector, the new mapped elements are destructively inserted
4714into @var{vec1}. The dynamic order of application of @var{f} is
4715unspecified.
4716@end deffn
4717
4718@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-for-each f vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4719Call @code{(f i (vector-ref vec1 i) (vector-ref vec2 i) ...)} for each
4720index i less than the length of the shortest vector passed. The
4721iteration is strictly left-to-right.
4722@end deffn
4723
4724@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-count pred? vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4725Count the number of parallel elements in the vectors that satisfy
4726@var{pred?}, which is applied, for each index i less than the length of
4727the smallest vector, to i and each parallel element in the vectors at
4728that index, in order.
4729
4730@example
4731(vector-count (lambda (i elt) (even? elt))
4732 '#(3 1 4 1 5 9 2 5 6))
4733@result{} 3
4734(vector-count (lambda (i x y) (< x y))
4735 '#(1 3 6 9) '#(2 4 6 8 10 12))
4736@result{} 2
4737@end example
4738@end deffn
4739
4740@node SRFI-43 Searching
4741@subsubsection SRFI-43 Searching
4742
4743@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-index pred? vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4744Find and return the index of the first elements in @var{vec1} @var{vec2}
4745@dots{} that satisfy @var{pred?}. If no matching element is found by
4746the end of the shortest vector, return @code{#f}.
4747
4748@example
4749(vector-index even? '#(3 1 4 1 5 9))
4750@result{} 2
4751(vector-index < '#(3 1 4 1 5 9 2 5 6) '#(2 7 1 8 2))
4752@result{} 1
4753(vector-index = '#(3 1 4 1 5 9 2 5 6) '#(2 7 1 8 2))
4754@result{} #f
4755@end example
4756@end deffn
4757
4758@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-index-right pred? vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4759Like @code{vector-index}, but it searches right-to-left, rather than
4760left-to-right. Note that the SRFI 43 specification requires that all
4761the vectors must have the same length, but both the SRFI 43 reference
4762implementation and Guile's implementation allow vectors with unequal
4763lengths, and start searching from the last index of the shortest vector.
4764@end deffn
4765
4766@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-skip pred? vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4767Find and return the index of the first elements in @var{vec1} @var{vec2}
4768@dots{} that do not satisfy @var{pred?}. If no matching element is
4769found by the end of the shortest vector, return @code{#f}. Equivalent
4770to @code{vector-index} but with the predicate inverted.
4771
4772@example
4773(vector-skip number? '#(1 2 a b 3 4 c d)) @result{} 2
4774@end example
4775@end deffn
4776
4777@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-skip-right pred? vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4778Like @code{vector-skip}, but it searches for a non-matching element
4779right-to-left, rather than left-to-right. Note that the SRFI 43
4780specification requires that all the vectors must have the same length,
4781but both the SRFI 43 reference implementation and Guile's implementation
4782allow vectors with unequal lengths, and start searching from the last
4783index of the shortest vector.
4784@end deffn
4785
4786@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-binary-search vec value cmp [start [end]]
4787Find and return an index of @var{vec} between @var{start} and @var{end}
4788whose value is @var{value} using a binary search. If no matching
4789element is found, return @code{#f}. The default @var{start} is 0 and
4790the default @var{end} is the length of @var{vec}.
4791
4792@var{cmp} must be a procedure of two arguments such that @code{(cmp a
4793b)} returns a negative integer if @math{a < b}, a positive integer if
4794@math{a > b}, or zero if @math{a = b}. The elements of @var{vec} must
4795be sorted in non-decreasing order according to @var{cmp}.
4796
4797Note that SRFI 43 does not document the @var{start} and @var{end}
4798arguments, but both its reference implementation and Guile's
4799implementation support them.
4800
4801@example
4802(define (char-cmp c1 c2)
4803 (cond ((char<? c1 c2) -1)
4804 ((char>? c1 c2) 1)
4805 (else 0)))
4806
4807(vector-binary-search '#(#\a #\b #\c #\d #\e #\f #\g #\h)
4808 #\g
4809 char-cmp)
4810@result{} 6
4811@end example
4812@end deffn
4813
4814@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-any pred? vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4815Find the first parallel set of elements from @var{vec1} @var{vec2}
4816@dots{} for which @var{pred?} returns a true value. If such a parallel
4817set of elements exists, @code{vector-any} returns the value that
4818@var{pred?} returned for that set of elements. The iteration is
4819strictly left-to-right.
4820@end deffn
4821
4822@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-every pred? vec1 vec2 @dots{}
4823If, for every index i between 0 and the length of the shortest vector
4824argument, the set of elements @code{(vector-ref vec1 i)}
4825@code{(vector-ref vec2 i)} @dots{} satisfies @var{pred?},
4826@code{vector-every} returns the value that @var{pred?} returned for the
4827last set of elements, at the last index of the shortest vector.
4828Otherwise it returns @code{#f}. The iteration is strictly
4829left-to-right.
4830@end deffn
4831
4832@node SRFI-43 Mutators
4833@subsubsection SRFI-43 Mutators
4834
4835@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-set! vec i value
4836Assign the contents of the location at @var{i} in @var{vec} to
4837@var{value}.
4838@end deffn
4839
4840@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-swap! vec i j
4841Swap the values of the locations in @var{vec} at @var{i} and @var{j}.
4842@end deffn
4843
4844@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-fill! vec fill [start [end]]
4845Assign the value of every location in @var{vec} between @var{start} and
4846@var{end} to @var{fill}. @var{start} defaults to 0 and @var{end}
4847defaults to the length of @var{vec}.
4848@end deffn
4849
4850@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-reverse! vec [start [end]]
4851Destructively reverse the contents of @var{vec} between @var{start} and
4852@var{end}. @var{start} defaults to 0 and @var{end} defaults to the
4853length of @var{vec}.
4854@end deffn
4855
4856@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-copy! target tstart source [sstart [send]]
4857Copy a block of elements from @var{source} to @var{target}, both of
4858which must be vectors, starting in @var{target} at @var{tstart} and
4859starting in @var{source} at @var{sstart}, ending when (@var{send} -
4860@var{sstart}) elements have been copied. It is an error for
4861@var{target} to have a length less than (@var{tstart} + @var{send} -
4862@var{sstart}). @var{sstart} defaults to 0 and @var{send} defaults to
4863the length of @var{source}.
4864@end deffn
4865
4866@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector-reverse-copy! target tstart source [sstart [send]]
4867Like @code{vector-copy!}, but this copies the elements in the reverse
4868order. It is an error if @var{target} and @var{source} are identical
4869vectors and the @var{target} and @var{source} ranges overlap; however,
4870if @var{tstart} = @var{sstart}, @code{vector-reverse-copy!} behaves as
4871@code{(vector-reverse! target tstart send)} would.
4872@end deffn
4873
4874@node SRFI-43 Conversion
4875@subsubsection SRFI-43 Conversion
4876
4877@deffn {Scheme Procedure} vector->list vec [start [end]]
4878Return a newly allocated list containing the elements in @var{vec}
4879between @var{start} and @var{end}. @var{start} defaults to 0 and
4880@var{end} defaults to the length of @var{vec}.
4881@end deffn
4882
4883@deffn {Scheme Procedure} reverse-vector->list vec [start [end]]
4884Like @code{vector->list}, but the resulting list contains the specified
4885range of elements of @var{vec} in reverse order.
4886@end deffn
4887
4888@deffn {Scheme Procedure} list->vector proper-list [start [end]]
4889Return a newly allocated vector of the elements from @var{proper-list}
4890with indices between @var{start} and @var{end}. @var{start} defaults to
48910 and @var{end} defaults to the length of @var{proper-list}. Note that
4892SRFI 43 does not document the @var{start} and @var{end} arguments, but
4893both its reference implementation and Guile's implementation support
4894them.
4895@end deffn
4896
4897@deffn {Scheme Procedure} reverse-list->vector proper-list [start [end]]
4898Like @code{list->vector}, but the resulting vector contains the specified
4899range of elements of @var{proper-list} in reverse order. Note that SRFI
490043 does not document the @var{start} and @var{end} arguments, but both
4901its reference implementation and Guile's implementation support them.
4902@end deffn
4903
f16a2007
AR
4904@node SRFI-45
4905@subsection SRFI-45 - Primitives for Expressing Iterative Lazy Algorithms
4906@cindex SRFI-45
4907
4908This subsection is based on @uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-45/srfi-45.html, the
4909specification of SRFI-45} written by Andr@'e van Tonder.
4910
4911@c Copyright (C) André van Tonder (2003). All Rights Reserved.
4912
4913@c Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
4914@c copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
4915@c "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
4916@c without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
4917@c distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
4918@c permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
4919@c the following conditions:
4920
4921@c The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
4922@c in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
4923
4924@c THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
4925@c OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
4926@c MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
4927@c NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
4928@c LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
4929@c OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
4930@c WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
4931
4932Lazy evaluation is traditionally simulated in Scheme using @code{delay}
4933and @code{force}. However, these primitives are not powerful enough to
4934express a large class of lazy algorithms that are iterative. Indeed, it
4935is folklore in the Scheme community that typical iterative lazy
4936algorithms written using delay and force will often require unbounded
4937memory.
4938
4939This SRFI provides set of three operations: @{@code{lazy}, @code{delay},
4940@code{force}@}, which allow the programmer to succinctly express lazy
4941algorithms while retaining bounded space behavior in cases that are
4942properly tail-recursive. A general recipe for using these primitives is
4943provided. An additional procedure @code{eager} is provided for the
4944construction of eager promises in cases where efficiency is a concern.
4945
4946Although this SRFI redefines @code{delay} and @code{force}, the
4947extension is conservative in the sense that the semantics of the subset
4948@{@code{delay}, @code{force}@} in isolation (i.e., as long as the
4949program does not use @code{lazy}) agrees with that in R5RS. In other
4950words, no program that uses the R5RS definitions of delay and force will
4951break if those definition are replaced by the SRFI-45 definitions of
4952delay and force.
4953
d291d799
MW
4954Guile also adds @code{promise?} to the list of exports, which is not
4955part of the official SRFI-45.
4956
4957@deffn {Scheme Procedure} promise? obj
4958Return true if @var{obj} is an SRFI-45 promise, otherwise return false.
4959@end deffn
4960
f16a2007 4961@deffn {Scheme Syntax} delay expression
65ad02b9
MW
4962Takes an expression of arbitrary type @var{a} and returns a promise of
4963type @code{(Promise @var{a})} which at some point in the future may be
4964asked (by the @code{force} procedure) to evaluate the expression and
4965deliver the resulting value.
f16a2007
AR
4966@end deffn
4967
4968@deffn {Scheme Syntax} lazy expression
65ad02b9
MW
4969Takes an expression of type @code{(Promise @var{a})} and returns a
4970promise of type @code{(Promise @var{a})} which at some point in the
4971future may be asked (by the @code{force} procedure) to evaluate the
4972expression and deliver the resulting promise.
f16a2007
AR
4973@end deffn
4974
65ad02b9
MW
4975@deffn {Scheme Procedure} force expression
4976Takes an argument of type @code{(Promise @var{a})} and returns a value
4977of type @var{a} as follows: If a value of type @var{a} has been computed
4978for the promise, this value is returned. Otherwise, the promise is
4979first evaluated, then overwritten by the obtained promise or value, and
4980then force is again applied (iteratively) to the promise.
f16a2007
AR
4981@end deffn
4982
65ad02b9
MW
4983@deffn {Scheme Procedure} eager expression
4984Takes an argument of type @var{a} and returns a value of type
4985@code{(Promise @var{a})}. As opposed to @code{delay}, the argument is
4986evaluated eagerly. Semantically, writing @code{(eager expression)} is
4987equivalent to writing
f16a2007
AR
4988
4989@lisp
4990(let ((value expression)) (delay value)).
4991@end lisp
4992
4993However, the former is more efficient since it does not require
65ad02b9
MW
4994unnecessary creation and evaluation of thunks. We also have the
4995equivalence
f16a2007
AR
4996
4997@lisp
4998(delay expression) = (lazy (eager expression))
4999@end lisp
5000@end deffn
5001
5002The following reduction rules may be helpful for reasoning about these
5003primitives. However, they do not express the memoization and memory
5004usage semantics specified above:
5005
5006@lisp
5007(force (delay expression)) -> expression
5008(force (lazy expression)) -> (force expression)
65ad02b9 5009(force (eager value)) -> value
f16a2007
AR
5010@end lisp
5011
5012@subsubheading Correct usage
5013
5014We now provide a general recipe for using the primitives @{@code{lazy},
5015@code{delay}, @code{force}@} to express lazy algorithms in Scheme. The
5016transformation is best described by way of an example: Consider the
5017stream-filter algorithm, expressed in a hypothetical lazy language as
5018
5019@lisp
5020(define (stream-filter p? s)
5021 (if (null? s) '()
5022 (let ((h (car s))
5023 (t (cdr s)))
5024 (if (p? h)
5025 (cons h (stream-filter p? t))
5026 (stream-filter p? t)))))
5027@end lisp
5028
ecb87335 5029This algorithm can be expressed as follows in Scheme:
f16a2007
AR
5030
5031@lisp
5032(define (stream-filter p? s)
5033 (lazy
5034 (if (null? (force s)) (delay '())
5035 (let ((h (car (force s)))
5036 (t (cdr (force s))))
5037 (if (p? h)
5038 (delay (cons h (stream-filter p? t)))
5039 (stream-filter p? t))))))
5040@end lisp
5041
5042In other words, we
5043
5044@itemize @bullet
5045@item
5046wrap all constructors (e.g., @code{'()}, @code{cons}) with @code{delay},
5047@item
5048apply @code{force} to arguments of deconstructors (e.g., @code{car},
5049@code{cdr} and @code{null?}),
5050@item
5051wrap procedure bodies with @code{(lazy ...)}.
5052@end itemize
5053
2d6a3144
MW
5054@node SRFI-46
5055@subsection SRFI-46 Basic syntax-rules Extensions
5056@cindex SRFI-46
5057
5058Guile's core @code{syntax-rules} supports the extensions specified by
5059SRFI-46/R7RS. Tail patterns have been supported since at least Guile
50602.0, and custom ellipsis identifiers have been supported since Guile
50612.0.10. @xref{Syntax Rules}.
5062
4ea9becb
KR
5063@node SRFI-55
5064@subsection SRFI-55 - Requiring Features
5065@cindex SRFI-55
5066
5067SRFI-55 provides @code{require-extension} which is a portable
5068mechanism to load selected SRFI modules. This is implemented in the
5069Guile core, there's no module needed to get SRFI-55 itself.
5070
df0a1002
BT
5071@deffn {library syntax} require-extension clause1 clause2 @dots{}
5072Require the features of @var{clause1} @var{clause2} @dots{} , throwing
5073an error if any are unavailable.
4ea9becb
KR
5074
5075A @var{clause} is of the form @code{(@var{identifier} arg...)}. The
5076only @var{identifier} currently supported is @code{srfi} and the
5077arguments are SRFI numbers. For example to get SRFI-1 and SRFI-6,
5078
5079@example
5080(require-extension (srfi 1 6))
5081@end example
5082
5083@code{require-extension} can only be used at the top-level.
5084
5085A Guile-specific program can simply @code{use-modules} to load SRFIs
5086not already in the core, @code{require-extension} is for programs
5087designed to be portable to other Scheme implementations.
5088@end deffn
5089
5090
8503beb8
KR
5091@node SRFI-60
5092@subsection SRFI-60 - Integers as Bits
5093@cindex SRFI-60
5094@cindex integers as bits
5095@cindex bitwise logical
5096
5097This SRFI provides various functions for treating integers as bits and
5098for bitwise manipulations. These functions can be obtained with,
5099
5100@example
5101(use-modules (srfi srfi-60))
5102@end example
5103
5104Integers are treated as infinite precision twos-complement, the same
5105as in the core logical functions (@pxref{Bitwise Operations}). And
5106likewise bit indexes start from 0 for the least significant bit. The
5107following functions in this SRFI are already in the Guile core,
5108
5109@quotation
5110@code{logand},
5111@code{logior},
5112@code{logxor},
5113@code{lognot},
5114@code{logtest},
5115@code{logcount},
5116@code{integer-length},
5117@code{logbit?},
5118@code{ash}
5119@end quotation
5120
5121@sp 1
5122@defun bitwise-and n1 ...
5123@defunx bitwise-ior n1 ...
5124@defunx bitwise-xor n1 ...
5125@defunx bitwise-not n
5126@defunx any-bits-set? j k
5127@defunx bit-set? index n
5128@defunx arithmetic-shift n count
5129@defunx bit-field n start end
5130@defunx bit-count n
5131Aliases for @code{logand}, @code{logior}, @code{logxor},
5132@code{lognot}, @code{logtest}, @code{logbit?}, @code{ash},
5133@code{bit-extract} and @code{logcount} respectively.
5134
5135Note that the name @code{bit-count} conflicts with @code{bit-count} in
5136the core (@pxref{Bit Vectors}).
5137@end defun
5138
5139@defun bitwise-if mask n1 n0
5140@defunx bitwise-merge mask n1 n0
5141Return an integer with bits selected from @var{n1} and @var{n0}
5142according to @var{mask}. Those bits where @var{mask} has 1s are taken
5143from @var{n1}, and those where @var{mask} has 0s are taken from
5144@var{n0}.
5145
5146@example
5147(bitwise-if 3 #b0101 #b1010) @result{} 9
5148@end example
5149@end defun
5150
5151@defun log2-binary-factors n
5152@defunx first-set-bit n
5153Return a count of how many factors of 2 are present in @var{n}. This
5154is also the bit index of the lowest 1 bit in @var{n}. If @var{n} is
51550, the return is @math{-1}.
5156
5157@example
5158(log2-binary-factors 6) @result{} 1
5159(log2-binary-factors -8) @result{} 3
5160@end example
5161@end defun
5162
5163@defun copy-bit index n newbit
5164Return @var{n} with the bit at @var{index} set according to
5165@var{newbit}. @var{newbit} should be @code{#t} to set the bit to 1,
5166or @code{#f} to set it to 0. Bits other than at @var{index} are
5167unchanged in the return.
5168
5169@example
5170(copy-bit 1 #b0101 #t) @result{} 7
5171@end example
5172@end defun
5173
5174@defun copy-bit-field n newbits start end
5175Return @var{n} with the bits from @var{start} (inclusive) to @var{end}
5176(exclusive) changed to the value @var{newbits}.
5177
5178The least significant bit in @var{newbits} goes to @var{start}, the
5179next to @math{@var{start}+1}, etc. Anything in @var{newbits} past the
5180@var{end} given is ignored.
5181
5182@example
5183(copy-bit-field #b10000 #b11 1 3) @result{} #b10110
5184@end example
5185@end defun
5186
5187@defun rotate-bit-field n count start end
5188Return @var{n} with the bit field from @var{start} (inclusive) to
5189@var{end} (exclusive) rotated upwards by @var{count} bits.
5190
5191@var{count} can be positive or negative, and it can be more than the
5192field width (it'll be reduced modulo the width).
5193
5194@example
5195(rotate-bit-field #b0110 2 1 4) @result{} #b1010
5196@end example
5197@end defun
5198
5199@defun reverse-bit-field n start end
5200Return @var{n} with the bits from @var{start} (inclusive) to @var{end}
5201(exclusive) reversed.
5202
5203@example
5204(reverse-bit-field #b101001 2 4) @result{} #b100101
5205@end example
5206@end defun
5207
5208@defun integer->list n [len]
5209Return bits from @var{n} in the form of a list of @code{#t} for 1 and
5210@code{#f} for 0. The least significant @var{len} bits are returned,
5211and the first list element is the most significant of those bits. If
5212@var{len} is not given, the default is @code{(integer-length @var{n})}
5213(@pxref{Bitwise Operations}).
5214
5215@example
5216(integer->list 6) @result{} (#t #t #f)
5217(integer->list 1 4) @result{} (#f #f #f #t)
5218@end example
5219@end defun
5220
5221@defun list->integer lst
5222@defunx booleans->integer bool@dots{}
5223Return an integer formed bitwise from the given @var{lst} list of
5224booleans, or for @code{booleans->integer} from the @var{bool}
5225arguments.
5226
5227Each boolean is @code{#t} for a 1 and @code{#f} for a 0. The first
5228element becomes the most significant bit in the return.
5229
5230@example
5231(list->integer '(#t #f #t #f)) @result{} 10
5232@end example
5233@end defun
5234
5235
43ed3b69
MV
5236@node SRFI-61
5237@subsection SRFI-61 - A more general @code{cond} clause
5238
5239This SRFI extends RnRS @code{cond} to support test expressions that
5240return multiple values, as well as arbitrary definitions of test
5241success. SRFI 61 is implemented in the Guile core; there's no module
5242needed to get SRFI-61 itself. Extended @code{cond} is documented in
9accf3d9 5243@ref{Conditionals,, Simple Conditional Evaluation}.
43ed3b69 5244
b306fae0
MW
5245@node SRFI-62
5246@subsection SRFI-62 - S-expression comments.
5247@cindex SRFI-62
5248
5249Starting from version 2.0, Guile's @code{read} supports SRFI-62/R7RS
5250S-expression comments by default.
5251
34e89877
MW
5252@node SRFI-64
5253@subsection SRFI-64 - A Scheme API for test suites.
5254@cindex SRFI-64
5255
5256See @uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-64/srfi-64.html, the
5257specification of SRFI-64}.
5258
8175a07e
AR
5259@node SRFI-67
5260@subsection SRFI-67 - Compare procedures
5261@cindex SRFI-67
5262
5263See @uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-67/srfi-67.html, the
5264specification of SRFI-67}.
43ed3b69 5265
1317062f
LC
5266@node SRFI-69
5267@subsection SRFI-69 - Basic hash tables
5268@cindex SRFI-69
5269
5270This is a portable wrapper around Guile's built-in hash table and weak
5271table support. @xref{Hash Tables}, for information on that built-in
5272support. Above that, this hash-table interface provides association
5273of equality and hash functions with tables at creation time, so
5274variants of each function are not required, as well as a procedure
5275that takes care of most uses for Guile hash table handles, which this
5276SRFI does not provide as such.
5277
5278Access it with:
5279
5280@lisp
5281(use-modules (srfi srfi-69))
5282@end lisp
5283
5284@menu
5285* SRFI-69 Creating hash tables::
5286* SRFI-69 Accessing table items::
5287* SRFI-69 Table properties::
5288* SRFI-69 Hash table algorithms::
5289@end menu
5290
5291@node SRFI-69 Creating hash tables
5292@subsubsection Creating hash tables
5293
5294@deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-hash-table [equal-proc hash-proc #:weak weakness start-size]
5295Create and answer a new hash table with @var{equal-proc} as the
5296equality function and @var{hash-proc} as the hashing function.
5297
5298By default, @var{equal-proc} is @code{equal?}. It can be any
5299two-argument procedure, and should answer whether two keys are the
5300same for this table's purposes.
5301
5302My default @var{hash-proc} assumes that @code{equal-proc} is no
5303coarser than @code{equal?} unless it is literally @code{string-ci=?}.
5304If provided, @var{hash-proc} should be a two-argument procedure that
5305takes a key and the current table size, and answers a reasonably good
5306hash integer between 0 (inclusive) and the size (exclusive).
5307
5308@var{weakness} should be @code{#f} or a symbol indicating how ``weak''
5309the hash table is:
5310
5311@table @code
5312@item #f
5313An ordinary non-weak hash table. This is the default.
5314
5315@item key
5316When the key has no more non-weak references at GC, remove that entry.
5317
5318@item value
5319When the value has no more non-weak references at GC, remove that
5320entry.
5321
5322@item key-or-value
5323When either has no more non-weak references at GC, remove the
5324association.
5325@end table
5326
5327As a legacy of the time when Guile couldn't grow hash tables,
5328@var{start-size} is an optional integer argument that specifies the
dfe8c13b
LC
5329approximate starting size for the hash table, which will be rounded to
5330an algorithmically-sounder number.
1317062f
LC
5331@end deffn
5332
dfe8c13b 5333By @dfn{coarser} than @code{equal?}, we mean that for all @var{x} and
1317062f
LC
5334@var{y} values where @code{(@var{equal-proc} @var{x} @var{y})},
5335@code{(equal? @var{x} @var{y})} as well. If that does not hold for
5336your @var{equal-proc}, you must provide a @var{hash-proc}.
5337
5338In the case of weak tables, remember that @dfn{references} above
5339always refers to @code{eq?}-wise references. Just because you have a
5340reference to some string @code{"foo"} doesn't mean that an association
5341with key @code{"foo"} in a weak-key table @emph{won't} be collected;
5342it only counts as a reference if the two @code{"foo"}s are @code{eq?},
5343regardless of @var{equal-proc}. As such, it is usually only sensible
5344to use @code{eq?} and @code{hashq} as the equivalence and hash
5345functions for a weak table. @xref{Weak References}, for more
5346information on Guile's built-in weak table support.
5347
5348@deffn {Scheme Procedure} alist->hash-table alist [equal-proc hash-proc #:weak weakness start-size]
5349As with @code{make-hash-table}, but initialize it with the
5350associations in @var{alist}. Where keys are repeated in @var{alist},
5351the leftmost association takes precedence.
5352@end deffn
5353
5354@node SRFI-69 Accessing table items
5355@subsubsection Accessing table items
5356
5357@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-ref table key [default-thunk]
5358@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-ref/default table key default
5359Answer the value associated with @var{key} in @var{table}. If
5360@var{key} is not present, answer the result of invoking the thunk
5361@var{default-thunk}, which signals an error instead by default.
5362
5363@code{hash-table-ref/default} is a variant that requires a third
5364argument, @var{default}, and answers @var{default} itself instead of
5365invoking it.
5366@end deffn
5367
5368@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-set! table key new-value
5369Set @var{key} to @var{new-value} in @var{table}.
5370@end deffn
5371
5372@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-delete! table key
5373Remove the association of @var{key} in @var{table}, if present. If
5374absent, do nothing.
5375@end deffn
5376
5377@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-exists? table key
5378Answer whether @var{key} has an association in @var{table}.
5379@end deffn
5380
5381@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-update! table key modifier [default-thunk]
5382@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-update!/default table key modifier default
5383Replace @var{key}'s associated value in @var{table} by invoking
5384@var{modifier} with one argument, the old value.
5385
5386If @var{key} is not present, and @var{default-thunk} is provided,
5387invoke it with no arguments to get the ``old value'' to be passed to
5388@var{modifier} as above. If @var{default-thunk} is not provided in
5389such a case, signal an error.
5390
5391@code{hash-table-update!/default} is a variant that requires the
5392fourth argument, which is used directly as the ``old value'' rather
5393than as a thunk to be invoked to retrieve the ``old value''.
5394@end deffn
5395
5396@node SRFI-69 Table properties
5397@subsubsection Table properties
5398
5399@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-size table
5400Answer the number of associations in @var{table}. This is guaranteed
5401to run in constant time for non-weak tables.
5402@end deffn
5403
5404@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-keys table
5405Answer an unordered list of the keys in @var{table}.
5406@end deffn
5407
5408@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-values table
5409Answer an unordered list of the values in @var{table}.
5410@end deffn
5411
5412@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-walk table proc
5413Invoke @var{proc} once for each association in @var{table}, passing
5414the key and value as arguments.
5415@end deffn
5416
5417@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-fold table proc init
5418Invoke @code{(@var{proc} @var{key} @var{value} @var{previous})} for
5419each @var{key} and @var{value} in @var{table}, where @var{previous} is
5420the result of the previous invocation, using @var{init} as the first
5421@var{previous} value. Answer the final @var{proc} result.
5422@end deffn
5423
5424@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table->alist table
5425Answer an alist where each association in @var{table} is an
5426association in the result.
5427@end deffn
5428
5429@node SRFI-69 Hash table algorithms
5430@subsubsection Hash table algorithms
5431
5432Each hash table carries an @dfn{equivalence function} and a @dfn{hash
5433function}, used to implement key lookups. Beginning users should
5434follow the rules for consistency of the default @var{hash-proc}
5435specified above. Advanced users can use these to implement their own
5436equivalence and hash functions for specialized lookup semantics.
5437
5438@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-equivalence-function hash-table
5439@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} hash-table-hash-function hash-table
5440Answer the equivalence and hash function of @var{hash-table}, respectively.
5441@end deffn
5442
5443@deffn {Scheme Procedure} hash obj [size]
5444@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} string-hash obj [size]
5445@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} string-ci-hash obj [size]
5446@deffnx {Scheme Procedure} hash-by-identity obj [size]
5447Answer a hash value appropriate for equality predicate @code{equal?},
5448@code{string=?}, @code{string-ci=?}, and @code{eq?}, respectively.
5449@end deffn
5450
5451@code{hash} is a backwards-compatible replacement for Guile's built-in
5452@code{hash}.
5453
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5454@node SRFI-87
5455@subsection SRFI-87 => in case clauses
5456@cindex SRFI-87
5457
5458Starting from version 2.0.6, Guile's core @code{case} syntax supports
5459@code{=>} in clauses, as specified by SRFI-87/R7RS.
5460@xref{Conditionals}.
5461
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5462@node SRFI-88
5463@subsection SRFI-88 Keyword Objects
5464@cindex SRFI-88
5465@cindex keyword objects
5466
e36280cb 5467@uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-88/srfi-88.html, SRFI-88} provides
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5468@dfn{keyword objects}, which are equivalent to Guile's keywords
5469(@pxref{Keywords}). SRFI-88 keywords can be entered using the
5470@dfn{postfix keyword syntax}, which consists of an identifier followed
1518f649 5471by @code{:} (@pxref{Scheme Read, @code{postfix} keyword syntax}).
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5472SRFI-88 can be made available with:
5473
5474@example
5475(use-modules (srfi srfi-88))
5476@end example
5477
5478Doing so installs the right reader option for keyword syntax, using
5479@code{(read-set! keywords 'postfix)}. It also provides the procedures
5480described below.
5481
5482@deffn {Scheme Procedure} keyword? obj
5483Return @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a keyword. This is the same procedure
5484as the same-named built-in procedure (@pxref{Keyword Procedures,
5485@code{keyword?}}).
5486
5487@example
5488(keyword? foo:) @result{} #t
5489(keyword? 'foo:) @result{} #t
5490(keyword? "foo") @result{} #f
5491@end example
5492@end deffn
5493
5494@deffn {Scheme Procedure} keyword->string kw
5495Return the name of @var{kw} as a string, i.e., without the trailing
5496colon. The returned string may not be modified, e.g., with
5497@code{string-set!}.
5498
5499@example
5500(keyword->string foo:) @result{} "foo"
5501@end example
5502@end deffn
5503
5504@deffn {Scheme Procedure} string->keyword str
5505Return the keyword object whose name is @var{str}.
5506
5507@example
5508(keyword->string (string->keyword "a b c")) @result{} "a b c"
5509@end example
5510@end deffn
5511
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5512@node SRFI-98
5513@subsection SRFI-98 Accessing environment variables.
5514@cindex SRFI-98
5515@cindex environment variables
5516
5517This is a portable wrapper around Guile's built-in support for
5518interacting with the current environment, @xref{Runtime Environment}.
5519
5520@deffn {Scheme Procedure} get-environment-variable name
5521Returns a string containing the value of the environment variable
5522given by the string @code{name}, or @code{#f} if the named
5523environment variable is not found. This is equivalent to
5524@code{(getenv name)}.
5525@end deffn
5526
5527@deffn {Scheme Procedure} get-environment-variables
5528Returns the names and values of all the environment variables as an
5529association list in which both the keys and the values are strings.
5530@end deffn
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5532@node SRFI-105
5533@subsection SRFI-105 Curly-infix expressions.
5534@cindex SRFI-105
5535@cindex curly-infix
5536@cindex curly-infix-and-bracket-lists
5537
5538Guile's built-in reader includes support for SRFI-105 curly-infix
5539expressions. See @uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-105/srfi-105.html,
5540the specification of SRFI-105}. Some examples:
5541
5542@example
5543@{n <= 5@} @result{} (<= n 5)
5544@{a + b + c@} @result{} (+ a b c)
5545@{a * @{b + c@}@} @result{} (* a (+ b c))
5546@{(- a) / b@} @result{} (/ (- a) b)
5547@{-(a) / b@} @result{} (/ (- a) b) as well
5548@{(f a b) + (g h)@} @result{} (+ (f a b) (g h))
5549@{f(a b) + g(h)@} @result{} (+ (f a b) (g h)) as well
5550@{f[a b] + g(h)@} @result{} (+ ($bracket-apply$ f a b) (g h))
5551'@{a + f(b) + x@} @result{} '(+ a (f b) x)
5552@{length(x) >= 6@} @result{} (>= (length x) 6)
5553@{n-1 + n-2@} @result{} (+ n-1 n-2)
5554@{n * factorial@{n - 1@}@} @result{} (* n (factorial (- n 1)))
5555@{@{a > 0@} and @{b >= 1@}@} @result{} (and (> a 0) (>= b 1))
5556@{f@{n - 1@}(x)@} @result{} ((f (- n 1)) x)
5557@{a . z@} @result{} ($nfx$ a . z)
5558@{a + b - c@} @result{} ($nfx$ a + b - c)
5559@end example
5560
5561To enable curly-infix expressions within a file, place the reader
5562directive @code{#!curly-infix} before the first use of curly-infix
5563notation. To globally enable curly-infix expressions in Guile's reader,
5564set the @code{curly-infix} read option.
5565
5566Guile also implements the following non-standard extension to SRFI-105:
5567if @code{curly-infix} is enabled and there is no other meaning assigned
5568to square brackets (i.e. the @code{square-brackets} read option is
5569turned off), then lists within square brackets are read as normal lists
5570but with the special symbol @code{$bracket-list$} added to the front.
5571To enable this combination of read options within a file, use the reader
5572directive @code{#!curly-infix-and-bracket-lists}. For example:
5573
5574@example
5575[a b] @result{} ($bracket-list$ a b)
5576[a . b] @result{} ($bracket-list$ a . b)
5577@end example
5578
5579
5580For more information on reader options, @xref{Scheme Read}.
5581
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5582@node SRFI-111
5583@subsection SRFI-111 Boxes.
5584@cindex SRFI-111
5585
5586@uref{http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-111/srfi-111.html, SRFI-111}
5587provides boxes: objects with a single mutable cell.
5588
5589@deffn {Scheme Procedure} box value
5590Return a newly allocated box whose contents is initialized to
5591@var{value}.
5592@end deffn
5593
5594@deffn {Scheme Procedure} box? obj
5595Return true if @var{obj} is a box, otherwise return false.
5596@end deffn
5597
5598@deffn {Scheme Procedure} unbox box
5599Return the current contents of @var{box}.
5600@end deffn
5601
5602@deffn {Scheme Procedure} set-box! box value
5603Set the contents of @var{box} to @var{value}.
5604@end deffn
5605
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5607
5608@c Local Variables:
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