Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/stable-2.0'
[bpt/guile.git] / doc / ref / api-control.texi
1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Guile Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2009, 2010,
4 @c 2011, 2012, 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See the file guile.texi for copying conditions.
6
7 @node Control Mechanisms
8 @section Controlling the Flow of Program Execution
9
10 See @ref{Control Flow} for a discussion of how the more general control
11 flow of Scheme affects C code.
12
13 @menu
14 * begin:: Sequencing and splicing.
15 * Conditionals:: If, when, unless, case, and cond.
16 * and or:: Conditional evaluation of a sequence.
17 * while do:: Iteration mechanisms.
18 * Prompts:: Composable, delimited continuations.
19 * Continuations:: Non-composable continuations.
20 * Multiple Values:: Returning and accepting multiple values.
21 * Exceptions:: Throwing and catching exceptions.
22 * Error Reporting:: Procedures for signaling errors.
23 * Dynamic Wind:: Dealing with non-local entrance/exit.
24 * Handling Errors:: How to handle errors in C code.
25 * Continuation Barriers:: Protection from non-local control flow.
26 @end menu
27
28 @node begin
29 @subsection Sequencing and Splicing
30
31 @cindex begin
32 @cindex sequencing
33 @cindex expression sequencing
34
35 As an expression, the @code{begin} syntax is used to evaluate a sequence
36 of sub-expressions in order. Consider the conditional expression below:
37
38 @lisp
39 (if (> x 0)
40 (begin (display "greater") (newline)))
41 @end lisp
42
43 If the test is true, we want to display ``greater'' to the current
44 output port, then display a newline. We use @code{begin} to form a
45 compound expression out of this sequence of sub-expressions.
46
47 @deffn syntax begin expr @dots{}
48 The expression(s) are evaluated in left-to-right order and the value of
49 the last expression is returned as the value of the
50 @code{begin}-expression. This expression type is used when the
51 expressions before the last one are evaluated for their side effects.
52 @end deffn
53
54 @cindex splicing
55 @cindex definition splicing
56
57 The @code{begin} syntax has another role in definition context
58 (@pxref{Internal Definitions}). A @code{begin} form in a definition
59 context @dfn{splices} its subforms into its place. For example,
60 consider the following procedure:
61
62 @lisp
63 (define (make-seal)
64 (define-sealant seal open)
65 (values seal open))
66 @end lisp
67
68 Let us assume the existence of a @code{define-sealant} macro that
69 expands out to some definitions wrapped in a @code{begin}, like so:
70
71 @lisp
72 (define (make-seal)
73 (begin
74 (define seal-tag
75 (list 'seal))
76 (define (seal x)
77 (cons seal-tag x))
78 (define (sealed? x)
79 (and (pair? x) (eq? (car x) seal-tag)))
80 (define (open x)
81 (if (sealed? x)
82 (cdr x)
83 (error "Expected a sealed value:" x))))
84 (values seal open))
85 @end lisp
86
87 Here, because the @code{begin} is in definition context, its subforms
88 are @dfn{spliced} into the place of the @code{begin}. This allows the
89 definitions created by the macro to be visible to the following
90 expression, the @code{values} form.
91
92 It is a fine point, but splicing and sequencing are different. It can
93 make sense to splice zero forms, because it can make sense to have zero
94 internal definitions before the expressions in a procedure or lexical
95 binding form. However it does not make sense to have a sequence of zero
96 expressions, because in that case it would not be clear what the value
97 of the sequence would be, because in a sequence of zero expressions,
98 there can be no last value. Sequencing zero expressions is an error.
99
100 It would be more elegant in some ways to eliminate splicing from the
101 Scheme language, and without macros (@pxref{Macros}), that would be a
102 good idea. But it is useful to be able to write macros that expand out
103 to multiple definitions, as in @code{define-sealant} above, so Scheme
104 abuses the @code{begin} form for these two tasks.
105
106 @node Conditionals
107 @subsection Simple Conditional Evaluation
108
109 @cindex conditional evaluation
110 @cindex if
111 @cindex when
112 @cindex unless
113 @cindex case
114 @cindex cond
115
116 Guile provides three syntactic constructs for conditional evaluation.
117 @code{if} is the normal if-then-else expression (with an optional else
118 branch), @code{cond} is a conditional expression with multiple branches
119 and @code{case} branches if an expression has one of a set of constant
120 values.
121
122 @deffn syntax if test consequent [alternate]
123 All arguments may be arbitrary expressions. First, @var{test} is
124 evaluated. If it returns a true value, the expression @var{consequent}
125 is evaluated and @var{alternate} is ignored. If @var{test} evaluates to
126 @code{#f}, @var{alternate} is evaluated instead. The values of the
127 evaluated branch (@var{consequent} or @var{alternate}) are returned as
128 the values of the @code{if} expression.
129
130 When @var{alternate} is omitted and the @var{test} evaluates to
131 @code{#f}, the value of the expression is not specified.
132 @end deffn
133
134 When you go to write an @code{if} without an alternate (a @dfn{one-armed
135 @code{if}}), part of what you are expressing is that you don't care
136 about the return value (or values) of the expression. As such, you are
137 more interested in the @emph{effect} of evaluating the consequent
138 expression. (By convention, we use the word @dfn{statement} to refer to
139 an expression that is evaluated for effect, not for value).
140
141 In such a case, it is considered more clear to express these intentions
142 with these special forms, @code{when} and @code{unless}. As an added
143 bonus, these forms accept multiple statements to evaluate, which are
144 implicitly wrapped in a @code{begin}.
145
146 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} when test statement1 statement2 ...
147 @deffnx {Scheme Syntax} unless test statement1 statement2 ...
148 The actual definitions of these forms are in many ways their most clear
149 documentation:
150
151 @example
152 (define-syntax-rule (when test stmt stmt* ...)
153 (if test (begin stmt stmt* ...)))
154
155 (define-syntax-rule (unless condition stmt stmt* ...)
156 (if (not test) (begin stmt stmt* ...)))
157 @end example
158
159 That is to say, @code{when} evaluates its consequent statements in order
160 if @var{test} is true. @code{unless} is the opposite: it evaluates the
161 statements if @var{test} is false.
162 @end deffn
163
164 @deffn syntax cond clause1 clause2 @dots{}
165 Each @code{cond}-clause must look like this:
166
167 @lisp
168 (@var{test} @var{expression} @dots{})
169 @end lisp
170
171 where @var{test} and @var{expression} are arbitrary expression, or like
172 this
173
174 @lisp
175 (@var{test} => @var{expression})
176 @end lisp
177
178 where @var{expression} must evaluate to a procedure.
179
180 The @var{test}s of the clauses are evaluated in order and as soon as one
181 of them evaluates to a true values, the corresponding @var{expression}s
182 are evaluated in order and the last value is returned as the value of
183 the @code{cond}-expression. For the @code{=>} clause type,
184 @var{expression} is evaluated and the resulting procedure is applied to
185 the value of @var{test}. The result of this procedure application is
186 then the result of the @code{cond}-expression.
187
188 @cindex SRFI-61
189 @cindex general cond clause
190 @cindex multiple values and cond
191 One additional @code{cond}-clause is available as an extension to
192 standard Scheme:
193
194 @lisp
195 (@var{test} @var{guard} => @var{expression})
196 @end lisp
197
198 where @var{guard} and @var{expression} must evaluate to procedures.
199 For this clause type, @var{test} may return multiple values, and
200 @code{cond} ignores its boolean state; instead, @code{cond} evaluates
201 @var{guard} and applies the resulting procedure to the value(s) of
202 @var{test}, as if @var{guard} were the @var{consumer} argument of
203 @code{call-with-values}. If the result of that procedure call is a
204 true value, it evaluates @var{expression} and applies the resulting
205 procedure to the value(s) of @var{test}, in the same manner as the
206 @var{guard} was called.
207
208 The @var{test} of the last @var{clause} may be the symbol @code{else}.
209 Then, if none of the preceding @var{test}s is true, the
210 @var{expression}s following the @code{else} are evaluated to produce the
211 result of the @code{cond}-expression.
212 @end deffn
213
214 @deffn syntax case key clause1 clause2 @dots{}
215 @var{key} may be any expression, and the @var{clause}s must have the form
216
217 @lisp
218 ((@var{datum1} @dots{}) @var{expr1} @var{expr2} @dots{})
219 @end lisp
220
221 or
222
223 @lisp
224 ((@var{datum1} @dots{}) => @var{expression})
225 @end lisp
226
227 and the last @var{clause} may have the form
228
229 @lisp
230 (else @var{expr1} @var{expr2} @dots{})
231 @end lisp
232
233 or
234
235 @lisp
236 (else => @var{expression})
237 @end lisp
238
239 All @var{datum}s must be distinct. First, @var{key} is evaluated. The
240 result of this evaluation is compared against all @var{datum} values using
241 @code{eqv?}. When this comparison succeeds, the expression(s) following
242 the @var{datum} are evaluated from left to right, returning the value of
243 the last expression as the result of the @code{case} expression.
244
245 If the @var{key} matches no @var{datum} and there is an
246 @code{else}-clause, the expressions following the @code{else} are
247 evaluated. If there is no such clause, the result of the expression is
248 unspecified.
249
250 For the @code{=>} clause types, @var{expression} is evaluated and the
251 resulting procedure is applied to the value of @var{key}. The result of
252 this procedure application is then the result of the
253 @code{case}-expression.
254 @end deffn
255
256
257 @node and or
258 @subsection Conditional Evaluation of a Sequence of Expressions
259
260 @code{and} and @code{or} evaluate all their arguments in order, similar
261 to @code{begin}, but evaluation stops as soon as one of the expressions
262 evaluates to false or true, respectively.
263
264 @deffn syntax and expr @dots{}
265 Evaluate the @var{expr}s from left to right and stop evaluation as soon
266 as one expression evaluates to @code{#f}; the remaining expressions are
267 not evaluated. The value of the last evaluated expression is returned.
268 If no expression evaluates to @code{#f}, the value of the last
269 expression is returned.
270
271 If used without expressions, @code{#t} is returned.
272 @end deffn
273
274 @deffn syntax or expr @dots{}
275 Evaluate the @var{expr}s from left to right and stop evaluation as soon
276 as one expression evaluates to a true value (that is, a value different
277 from @code{#f}); the remaining expressions are not evaluated. The value
278 of the last evaluated expression is returned. If all expressions
279 evaluate to @code{#f}, @code{#f} is returned.
280
281 If used without expressions, @code{#f} is returned.
282 @end deffn
283
284
285 @node while do
286 @subsection Iteration mechanisms
287
288 @cindex iteration
289 @cindex looping
290 @cindex named let
291
292 Scheme has only few iteration mechanisms, mainly because iteration in
293 Scheme programs is normally expressed using recursion. Nevertheless,
294 R5RS defines a construct for programming loops, calling @code{do}. In
295 addition, Guile has an explicit looping syntax called @code{while}.
296
297 @deffn syntax do ((variable init [step]) @dots{}) (test expr @dots{}) body @dots{}
298 Bind @var{variable}s and evaluate @var{body} until @var{test} is true.
299 The return value is the last @var{expr} after @var{test}, if given. A
300 simple example will illustrate the basic form,
301
302 @example
303 (do ((i 1 (1+ i)))
304 ((> i 4))
305 (display i))
306 @print{} 1234
307 @end example
308
309 @noindent
310 Or with two variables and a final return value,
311
312 @example
313 (do ((i 1 (1+ i))
314 (p 3 (* 3 p)))
315 ((> i 4)
316 p)
317 (format #t "3**~s is ~s\n" i p))
318 @print{}
319 3**1 is 3
320 3**2 is 9
321 3**3 is 27
322 3**4 is 81
323 @result{}
324 789
325 @end example
326
327 The @var{variable} bindings are established like a @code{let}, in that
328 the expressions are all evaluated and then all bindings made. When
329 iterating, the optional @var{step} expressions are evaluated with the
330 previous bindings in scope, then new bindings all made.
331
332 The @var{test} expression is a termination condition. Looping stops
333 when the @var{test} is true. It's evaluated before running the
334 @var{body} each time, so if it's true the first time then @var{body}
335 is not run at all.
336
337 The optional @var{expr}s after the @var{test} are evaluated at the end
338 of looping, with the final @var{variable} bindings available. The
339 last @var{expr} gives the return value, or if there are no @var{expr}s
340 the return value is unspecified.
341
342 Each iteration establishes bindings to fresh locations for the
343 @var{variable}s, like a new @code{let} for each iteration. This is
344 done for @var{variable}s without @var{step} expressions too. The
345 following illustrates this, showing how a new @code{i} is captured by
346 the @code{lambda} in each iteration (@pxref{About Closure,, The
347 Concept of Closure}).
348
349 @example
350 (define lst '())
351 (do ((i 1 (1+ i)))
352 ((> i 4))
353 (set! lst (cons (lambda () i) lst)))
354 (map (lambda (proc) (proc)) lst)
355 @result{}
356 (4 3 2 1)
357 @end example
358 @end deffn
359
360 @deffn syntax while cond body @dots{}
361 Run a loop executing the @var{body} forms while @var{cond} is true.
362 @var{cond} is tested at the start of each iteration, so if it's
363 @code{#f} the first time then @var{body} is not executed at all.
364
365 Within @code{while}, two extra bindings are provided, they can be used
366 from both @var{cond} and @var{body}.
367
368 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} break break-arg @dots{}
369 Break out of the @code{while} form.
370 @end deffn
371
372 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} continue
373 Abandon the current iteration, go back to the start and test
374 @var{cond} again, etc.
375 @end deffn
376
377 If the loop terminates normally, by the @var{cond} evaluating to
378 @code{#f}, then the @code{while} expression as a whole evaluates to
379 @code{#f}. If it terminates by a call to @code{break} with some number
380 of arguments, those arguments are returned from the @code{while}
381 expression, as multiple values. Otherwise if it terminates by a call to
382 @code{break} with no arguments, then return value is @code{#t}.
383
384 @example
385 (while #f (error "not reached")) @result{} #f
386 (while #t (break)) @result{} #t
387 (while #t (break 1 2 3)) @result{} 1 2 3
388 @end example
389
390 Each @code{while} form gets its own @code{break} and @code{continue}
391 procedures, operating on that @code{while}. This means when loops are
392 nested the outer @code{break} can be used to escape all the way out.
393 For example,
394
395 @example
396 (while (test1)
397 (let ((outer-break break))
398 (while (test2)
399 (if (something)
400 (outer-break #f))
401 ...)))
402 @end example
403
404 Note that each @code{break} and @code{continue} procedure can only be
405 used within the dynamic extent of its @code{while}. Outside the
406 @code{while} their behaviour is unspecified.
407 @end deffn
408
409 @cindex named let
410 Another very common way of expressing iteration in Scheme programs is
411 the use of the so-called @dfn{named let}.
412
413 Named let is a variant of @code{let} which creates a procedure and calls
414 it in one step. Because of the newly created procedure, named let is
415 more powerful than @code{do}--it can be used for iteration, but also
416 for arbitrary recursion.
417
418 @deffn syntax let variable bindings body
419 For the definition of @var{bindings} see the documentation about
420 @code{let} (@pxref{Local Bindings}).
421
422 Named @code{let} works as follows:
423
424 @itemize @bullet
425 @item
426 A new procedure which accepts as many arguments as are in @var{bindings}
427 is created and bound locally (using @code{let}) to @var{variable}. The
428 new procedure's formal argument names are the name of the
429 @var{variables}.
430
431 @item
432 The @var{body} expressions are inserted into the newly created procedure.
433
434 @item
435 The procedure is called with the @var{init} expressions as the formal
436 arguments.
437 @end itemize
438
439 The next example implements a loop which iterates (by recursion) 1000
440 times.
441
442 @lisp
443 (let lp ((x 1000))
444 (if (positive? x)
445 (lp (- x 1))
446 x))
447 @result{}
448 0
449 @end lisp
450 @end deffn
451
452
453 @node Prompts
454 @subsection Prompts
455 @cindex prompts
456 @cindex delimited continuations
457 @cindex composable continuations
458 @cindex non-local exit
459
460 Prompts are control-flow barriers between different parts of a program. In the
461 same way that a user sees a shell prompt (e.g., the Bash prompt) as a barrier
462 between the operating system and her programs, Scheme prompts allow the Scheme
463 programmer to treat parts of programs as if they were running in different
464 operating systems.
465
466 We use this roundabout explanation because, unless you're a functional
467 programming junkie, you probably haven't heard the term, ``delimited, composable
468 continuation''. That's OK; it's a relatively recent topic, but a very useful
469 one to know about.
470
471 @menu
472 * Prompt Primitives:: Call-with-prompt and abort-to-prompt.
473 * Shift and Reset:: The zoo of delimited control operators.
474 @end menu
475
476 @node Prompt Primitives
477 @subsubsection Prompt Primitives
478
479 Guile's primitive delimited control operators are
480 @code{call-with-prompt} and @code{abort-to-prompt}.
481
482 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} call-with-prompt tag thunk handler
483 Set up a prompt, and call @var{thunk} within that prompt.
484
485 During the dynamic extent of the call to @var{thunk}, a prompt named @var{tag}
486 will be present in the dynamic context, such that if a user calls
487 @code{abort-to-prompt} (see below) with that tag, control rewinds back to the
488 prompt, and the @var{handler} is run.
489
490 @var{handler} must be a procedure. The first argument to @var{handler} will be
491 the state of the computation begun when @var{thunk} was called, and ending with
492 the call to @code{abort-to-prompt}. The remaining arguments to @var{handler} are
493 those passed to @code{abort-to-prompt}.
494 @end deffn
495
496 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-prompt-tag [stem]
497 Make a new prompt tag. A prompt tag is simply a unique object.
498 Currently, a prompt tag is a fresh pair. This may change in some future
499 Guile version.
500 @end deffn
501
502 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} default-prompt-tag
503 Return the default prompt tag. Having a distinguished default prompt
504 tag allows some useful prompt and abort idioms, discussed in the next
505 section. Note that @code{default-prompt-tag} is actually a parameter,
506 and so may be dynamically rebound using @code{parameterize}.
507 @xref{Parameters}.
508 @end deffn
509
510 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} abort-to-prompt tag val1 val2 @dots{}
511 Unwind the dynamic and control context to the nearest prompt named @var{tag},
512 also passing the given values.
513 @end deffn
514
515 C programmers may recognize @code{call-with-prompt} and @code{abort-to-prompt}
516 as a fancy kind of @code{setjmp} and @code{longjmp}, respectively. Prompts are
517 indeed quite useful as non-local escape mechanisms. Guile's @code{catch} and
518 @code{throw} are implemented in terms of prompts. Prompts are more convenient
519 than @code{longjmp}, in that one has the opportunity to pass multiple values to
520 the jump target.
521
522 Also unlike @code{longjmp}, the prompt handler is given the full state of the
523 process that was aborted, as the first argument to the prompt's handler. That
524 state is the @dfn{continuation} of the computation wrapped by the prompt. It is
525 a @dfn{delimited continuation}, because it is not the whole continuation of the
526 program; rather, just the computation initiated by the call to
527 @code{call-with-prompt}.
528
529 The continuation is a procedure, and may be reinstated simply by invoking it,
530 with any number of values. Here's where things get interesting, and complicated
531 as well. Besides being described as delimited, continuations reified by prompts
532 are also @dfn{composable}, because invoking a prompt-saved continuation composes
533 that continuation with the current one.
534
535 Imagine you have saved a continuation via call-with-prompt:
536
537 @example
538 (define cont
539 (call-with-prompt
540 ;; tag
541 'foo
542 ;; thunk
543 (lambda ()
544 (+ 34 (abort-to-prompt 'foo)))
545 ;; handler
546 (lambda (k) k)))
547 @end example
548
549 The resulting continuation is the addition of 34. It's as if you had written:
550
551 @example
552 (define cont
553 (lambda (x)
554 (+ 34 x)))
555 @end example
556
557 So, if we call @code{cont} with one numeric value, we get that number,
558 incremented by 34:
559
560 @example
561 (cont 8)
562 @result{} 42
563 (* 2 (cont 8))
564 @result{} 84
565 @end example
566
567 The last example illustrates what we mean when we say, "composes with the
568 current continuation". We mean that there is a current continuation -- some
569 remaining things to compute, like @code{(lambda (x) (* x 2))} -- and that
570 calling the saved continuation doesn't wipe out the current continuation, it
571 composes the saved continuation with the current one.
572
573 We're belaboring the point here because traditional Scheme continuations, as
574 discussed in the next section, aren't composable, and are actually less
575 expressive than continuations captured by prompts. But there's a place for them
576 both.
577
578 Before moving on, we should mention that if the handler of a prompt is a
579 @code{lambda} expression, and the first argument isn't referenced, an abort to
580 that prompt will not cause a continuation to be reified. This can be an
581 important efficiency consideration to keep in mind.
582
583 @node Shift and Reset
584 @subsubsection Shift, Reset, and All That
585
586 There is a whole zoo of delimited control operators, and as it does not
587 seem to be a bounded set, Guile implements support for them in a
588 separate module:
589
590 @example
591 (use-modules (ice-9 control))
592 @end example
593
594 Firstly, we have a helpful abbreviation for the @code{call-with-prompt}
595 operator.
596
597 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} % expr
598 @deffnx {Scheme Syntax} % expr handler
599 @deffnx {Scheme Syntax} % tag expr handler
600 Evaluate @var{expr} in a prompt, optionally specifying a tag and a
601 handler. If no tag is given, the default prompt tag is used.
602
603 If no handler is given, a default handler is installed. The default
604 handler accepts a procedure of one argument, which will called on the
605 captured continuation, within a prompt.
606
607 Sometimes it's easier just to show code, as in this case:
608
609 @example
610 (define (default-prompt-handler k proc)
611 (% (default-prompt-tag)
612 (proc k)
613 default-prompt-handler))
614 @end example
615
616 The @code{%} symbol is chosen because it looks like a prompt.
617 @end deffn
618
619 Likewise there is an abbreviation for @code{abort-to-prompt}, which
620 assumes the default prompt tag:
621
622 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} abort val1 val2 @dots{}
623 Abort to the default prompt tag, passing @var{val1} @var{val2} @dots{}
624 to the handler.
625 @end deffn
626
627 As mentioned before, @code{(ice-9 control)} also provides other
628 delimited control operators. This section is a bit technical, and
629 first-time users of delimited continuations should probably come back to
630 it after some practice with @code{%}.
631
632 Still here? So, when one implements a delimited control operator like
633 @code{call-with-prompt}, one needs to make two decisions. Firstly, does
634 the handler run within or outside the prompt? Having the handler run
635 within the prompt allows an abort inside the handler to return to the
636 same prompt handler, which is often useful. However it prevents tail
637 calls from the handler, so it is less general.
638
639 Similarly, does invoking a captured continuation reinstate a prompt?
640 Again we have the tradeoff of convenience versus proper tail calls.
641
642 These decisions are captured in the Felleisen @dfn{F} operator. If
643 neither the continuations nor the handlers implicitly add a prompt, the
644 operator is known as @dfn{--F--}. This is the case for Guile's
645 @code{call-with-prompt} and @code{abort-to-prompt}.
646
647 If both continuation and handler implicitly add prompts, then the
648 operator is @dfn{+F+}. @code{shift} and @code{reset} are such
649 operators.
650
651 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} reset body1 body2 @dots{}
652 Establish a prompt, and evaluate @var{body1} @var{body2} @dots{} within
653 that prompt.
654
655 The prompt handler is designed to work with @code{shift}, described
656 below.
657 @end deffn
658
659 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} shift cont body1 body2 @dots{}
660 Abort to the nearest @code{reset}, and evaluate @var{body1} @var{body2}
661 @dots{} in a context in which the captured continuation is bound to
662 @var{cont}.
663
664 As mentioned above, taken together, the @var{body1} @var{body2} @dots{}
665 expressions and the invocations of @var{cont} implicitly establish a
666 prompt.
667 @end deffn
668
669 Interested readers are invited to explore Oleg Kiselyov's wonderful web
670 site at @uref{http://okmij.org/ftp/}, for more information on these
671 operators.
672
673
674 @node Continuations
675 @subsection Continuations
676 @cindex continuations
677
678 A ``continuation'' is the code that will execute when a given function
679 or expression returns. For example, consider
680
681 @example
682 (define (foo)
683 (display "hello\n")
684 (display (bar)) (newline)
685 (exit))
686 @end example
687
688 The continuation from the call to @code{bar} comprises a
689 @code{display} of the value returned, a @code{newline} and an
690 @code{exit}. This can be expressed as a function of one argument.
691
692 @example
693 (lambda (r)
694 (display r) (newline)
695 (exit))
696 @end example
697
698 In Scheme, continuations are represented as special procedures just
699 like this. The special property is that when a continuation is called
700 it abandons the current program location and jumps directly to that
701 represented by the continuation.
702
703 A continuation is like a dynamic label, capturing at run-time a point
704 in program execution, including all the nested calls that have lead to
705 it (or rather the code that will execute when those calls return).
706
707 Continuations are created with the following functions.
708
709 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} call-with-current-continuation proc
710 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} call/cc proc
711 @rnindex call-with-current-continuation
712 Capture the current continuation and call @code{(@var{proc}
713 @var{cont})} with it. The return value is the value returned by
714 @var{proc}, or when @code{(@var{cont} @var{value})} is later invoked,
715 the return is the @var{value} passed.
716
717 Normally @var{cont} should be called with one argument, but when the
718 location resumed is expecting multiple values (@pxref{Multiple
719 Values}) then they should be passed as multiple arguments, for
720 instance @code{(@var{cont} @var{x} @var{y} @var{z})}.
721
722 @var{cont} may only be used from the same side of a continuation
723 barrier as it was created (@pxref{Continuation Barriers}), and in a
724 multi-threaded program only from the thread in which it was created.
725
726 The call to @var{proc} is not part of the continuation captured, it runs
727 only when the continuation is created. Often a program will want to
728 store @var{cont} somewhere for later use; this can be done in
729 @var{proc}.
730
731 The @code{call} in the name @code{call-with-current-continuation}
732 refers to the way a call to @var{proc} gives the newly created
733 continuation. It's not related to the way a call is used later to
734 invoke that continuation.
735
736 @code{call/cc} is an alias for @code{call-with-current-continuation}.
737 This is in common use since the latter is rather long.
738 @end deffn
739
740 @sp 1
741 @noindent
742 Here is a simple example,
743
744 @example
745 (define kont #f)
746 (format #t "the return is ~a\n"
747 (call/cc (lambda (k)
748 (set! kont k)
749 1)))
750 @result{} the return is 1
751
752 (kont 2)
753 @result{} the return is 2
754 @end example
755
756 @code{call/cc} captures a continuation in which the value returned is
757 going to be displayed by @code{format}. The @code{lambda} stores this
758 in @code{kont} and gives an initial return @code{1} which is
759 displayed. The later invocation of @code{kont} resumes the captured
760 point, but this time returning @code{2}, which is displayed.
761
762 When Guile is run interactively, a call to @code{format} like this has
763 an implicit return back to the read-eval-print loop. @code{call/cc}
764 captures that like any other return, which is why interactively
765 @code{kont} will come back to read more input.
766
767 @sp 1
768 C programmers may note that @code{call/cc} is like @code{setjmp} in
769 the way it records at runtime a point in program execution. A call to
770 a continuation is like a @code{longjmp} in that it abandons the
771 present location and goes to the recorded one. Like @code{longjmp},
772 the value passed to the continuation is the value returned by
773 @code{call/cc} on resuming there. However @code{longjmp} can only go
774 up the program stack, but the continuation mechanism can go anywhere.
775
776 When a continuation is invoked, @code{call/cc} and subsequent code
777 effectively ``returns'' a second time. It can be confusing to imagine
778 a function returning more times than it was called. It may help
779 instead to think of it being stealthily re-entered and then program
780 flow going on as normal.
781
782 @code{dynamic-wind} (@pxref{Dynamic Wind}) can be used to ensure setup
783 and cleanup code is run when a program locus is resumed or abandoned
784 through the continuation mechanism.
785
786 @sp 1
787 Continuations are a powerful mechanism, and can be used to implement
788 almost any sort of control structure, such as loops, coroutines, or
789 exception handlers.
790
791 However the implementation of continuations in Guile is not as
792 efficient as one might hope, because Guile is designed to cooperate
793 with programs written in other languages, such as C, which do not know
794 about continuations. Basically continuations are captured by a block
795 copy of the stack, and resumed by copying back.
796
797 For this reason, continuations captured by @code{call/cc} should be used only
798 when there is no other simple way to achieve the desired result, or when the
799 elegance of the continuation mechanism outweighs the need for performance.
800
801 Escapes upwards from loops or nested functions are generally best
802 handled with prompts (@pxref{Prompts}). Coroutines can be
803 efficiently implemented with cooperating threads (a thread holds a
804 full program stack but doesn't copy it around the way continuations
805 do).
806
807
808 @node Multiple Values
809 @subsection Returning and Accepting Multiple Values
810
811 @cindex multiple values
812 @cindex receive
813
814 Scheme allows a procedure to return more than one value to its caller.
815 This is quite different to other languages which only allow
816 single-value returns. Returning multiple values is different from
817 returning a list (or pair or vector) of values to the caller, because
818 conceptually not @emph{one} compound object is returned, but several
819 distinct values.
820
821 The primitive procedures for handling multiple values are @code{values}
822 and @code{call-with-values}. @code{values} is used for returning
823 multiple values from a procedure. This is done by placing a call to
824 @code{values} with zero or more arguments in tail position in a
825 procedure body. @code{call-with-values} combines a procedure returning
826 multiple values with a procedure which accepts these values as
827 parameters.
828
829 @rnindex values
830 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} values arg @dots{}
831 @deffnx {C Function} scm_values (args)
832 Delivers all of its arguments to its continuation. Except for
833 continuations created by the @code{call-with-values} procedure,
834 all continuations take exactly one value. The effect of
835 passing no value or more than one value to continuations that
836 were not created by @code{call-with-values} is unspecified.
837
838 For @code{scm_values}, @var{args} is a list of arguments and the
839 return is a multiple-values object which the caller can return. In
840 the current implementation that object shares structure with
841 @var{args}, so @var{args} should not be modified subsequently.
842 @end deffn
843
844 @deftypefn {C Function} SCM scm_c_values (SCM *base, size_t n)
845 @code{scm_c_values} is an alternative to @code{scm_values}. It creates
846 a new values object, and copies into it the @var{n} values starting from
847 @var{base}.
848
849 Currently this creates a list and passes it to @code{scm_values}, but we
850 expect that in the future we will be able to use more a efficient
851 representation.
852 @end deftypefn
853
854 @deftypefn {C Function} size_t scm_c_nvalues (SCM obj)
855 If @var{obj} is a multiple-values object, returns the number of values
856 it contains. Otherwise returns 1.
857 @end deftypefn
858
859 @deftypefn {C Function} SCM scm_c_value_ref (SCM obj, size_t idx)
860 Returns the value at the position specified by @var{idx} in
861 @var{obj}. Note that @var{obj} will ordinarily be a
862 multiple-values object, but it need not be. Any other object
863 represents a single value (itself), and is handled appropriately.
864 @end deftypefn
865
866 @rnindex call-with-values
867 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} call-with-values producer consumer
868 Calls its @var{producer} argument with no values and a
869 continuation that, when passed some values, calls the
870 @var{consumer} procedure with those values as arguments. The
871 continuation for the call to @var{consumer} is the continuation
872 of the call to @code{call-with-values}.
873
874 @example
875 (call-with-values (lambda () (values 4 5))
876 (lambda (a b) b))
877 @result{} 5
878
879 @end example
880 @example
881 (call-with-values * -)
882 @result{} -1
883 @end example
884 @end deffn
885
886 In addition to the fundamental procedures described above, Guile has a
887 module which exports a syntax called @code{receive}, which is much
888 more convenient. This is in the @code{(ice-9 receive)} and is the
889 same as specified by SRFI-8 (@pxref{SRFI-8}).
890
891 @lisp
892 (use-modules (ice-9 receive))
893 @end lisp
894
895 @deffn {library syntax} receive formals expr body @dots{}
896 Evaluate the expression @var{expr}, and bind the result values (zero
897 or more) to the formal arguments in @var{formals}. @var{formals} is a
898 list of symbols, like the argument list in a @code{lambda}
899 (@pxref{Lambda}). After binding the variables, the expressions in
900 @var{body} @dots{} are evaluated in order, the return value is the
901 result from the last expression.
902
903 For example getting results from @code{partition} in SRFI-1
904 (@pxref{SRFI-1}),
905
906 @example
907 (receive (odds evens)
908 (partition odd? '(7 4 2 8 3))
909 (display odds)
910 (display " and ")
911 (display evens))
912 @print{} (7 3) and (4 2 8)
913 @end example
914
915 @end deffn
916
917
918 @node Exceptions
919 @subsection Exceptions
920 @cindex error handling
921 @cindex exception handling
922
923 A common requirement in applications is to want to jump
924 @dfn{non-locally} from the depths of a computation back to, say, the
925 application's main processing loop. Usually, the place that is the
926 target of the jump is somewhere in the calling stack of procedures that
927 called the procedure that wants to jump back. For example, typical
928 logic for a key press driven application might look something like this:
929
930 @example
931 main-loop:
932 read the next key press and call dispatch-key
933
934 dispatch-key:
935 lookup the key in a keymap and call an appropriate procedure,
936 say find-file
937
938 find-file:
939 interactively read the required file name, then call
940 find-specified-file
941
942 find-specified-file:
943 check whether file exists; if not, jump back to main-loop
944 @dots{}
945 @end example
946
947 The jump back to @code{main-loop} could be achieved by returning through
948 the stack one procedure at a time, using the return value of each
949 procedure to indicate the error condition, but Guile (like most modern
950 programming languages) provides an additional mechanism called
951 @dfn{exception handling} that can be used to implement such jumps much
952 more conveniently.
953
954 @menu
955 * Exception Terminology:: Different ways to say the same thing.
956 * Catch:: Setting up to catch exceptions.
957 * Throw Handlers:: Handling exceptions before unwinding the stack.
958 * Throw:: Throwing an exception.
959 * Exception Implementation:: How Guile implements exceptions.
960 @end menu
961
962
963 @node Exception Terminology
964 @subsubsection Exception Terminology
965
966 There are several variations on the terminology for dealing with
967 non-local jumps. It is useful to be aware of them, and to realize
968 that they all refer to the same basic mechanism.
969
970 @itemize @bullet
971 @item
972 Actually making a non-local jump may be called @dfn{raising an
973 exception}, @dfn{raising a signal}, @dfn{throwing an exception} or
974 @dfn{doing a long jump}. When the jump indicates an error condition,
975 people may talk about @dfn{signalling}, @dfn{raising} or @dfn{throwing}
976 @dfn{an error}.
977
978 @item
979 Handling the jump at its target may be referred to as @dfn{catching} or
980 @dfn{handling} the @dfn{exception}, @dfn{signal} or, where an error
981 condition is involved, @dfn{error}.
982 @end itemize
983
984 Where @dfn{signal} and @dfn{signalling} are used, special care is needed
985 to avoid the risk of confusion with POSIX signals.
986
987 This manual prefers to speak of throwing and catching exceptions, since
988 this terminology matches the corresponding Guile primitives.
989
990
991 @node Catch
992 @subsubsection Catching Exceptions
993
994 @code{catch} is used to set up a target for a possible non-local jump.
995 The arguments of a @code{catch} expression are a @dfn{key}, which
996 restricts the set of exceptions to which this @code{catch} applies, a
997 thunk that specifies the code to execute and one or two @dfn{handler}
998 procedures that say what to do if an exception is thrown while executing
999 the code. If the execution thunk executes @dfn{normally}, which means
1000 without throwing any exceptions, the handler procedures are not called
1001 at all.
1002
1003 When an exception is thrown using the @code{throw} function, the first
1004 argument of the @code{throw} is a symbol that indicates the type of the
1005 exception. For example, Guile throws an exception using the symbol
1006 @code{numerical-overflow} to indicate numerical overflow errors such as
1007 division by zero:
1008
1009 @lisp
1010 (/ 1 0)
1011 @result{}
1012 ABORT: (numerical-overflow)
1013 @end lisp
1014
1015 The @var{key} argument in a @code{catch} expression corresponds to this
1016 symbol. @var{key} may be a specific symbol, such as
1017 @code{numerical-overflow}, in which case the @code{catch} applies
1018 specifically to exceptions of that type; or it may be @code{#t}, which
1019 means that the @code{catch} applies to all exceptions, irrespective of
1020 their type.
1021
1022 The second argument of a @code{catch} expression should be a thunk
1023 (i.e.@: a procedure that accepts no arguments) that specifies the normal
1024 case code. The @code{catch} is active for the execution of this thunk,
1025 including any code called directly or indirectly by the thunk's body.
1026 Evaluation of the @code{catch} expression activates the catch and then
1027 calls this thunk.
1028
1029 The third argument of a @code{catch} expression is a handler procedure.
1030 If an exception is thrown, this procedure is called with exactly the
1031 arguments specified by the @code{throw}. Therefore, the handler
1032 procedure must be designed to accept a number of arguments that
1033 corresponds to the number of arguments in all @code{throw} expressions
1034 that can be caught by this @code{catch}.
1035
1036 The fourth, optional argument of a @code{catch} expression is another
1037 handler procedure, called the @dfn{pre-unwind} handler. It differs from
1038 the third argument in that if an exception is thrown, it is called,
1039 @emph{before} the third argument handler, in exactly the dynamic context
1040 of the @code{throw} expression that threw the exception. This means
1041 that it is useful for capturing or displaying the stack at the point of
1042 the @code{throw}, or for examining other aspects of the dynamic context,
1043 such as fluid values, before the context is unwound back to that of the
1044 prevailing @code{catch}.
1045
1046 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} catch key thunk handler [pre-unwind-handler]
1047 @deffnx {C Function} scm_catch_with_pre_unwind_handler (key, thunk, handler, pre_unwind_handler)
1048 @deffnx {C Function} scm_catch (key, thunk, handler)
1049 Invoke @var{thunk} in the dynamic context of @var{handler} for
1050 exceptions matching @var{key}. If thunk throws to the symbol
1051 @var{key}, then @var{handler} is invoked this way:
1052 @lisp
1053 (handler key args ...)
1054 @end lisp
1055
1056 @var{key} is a symbol or @code{#t}.
1057
1058 @var{thunk} takes no arguments. If @var{thunk} returns
1059 normally, that is the return value of @code{catch}.
1060
1061 Handler is invoked outside the scope of its own @code{catch}.
1062 If @var{handler} again throws to the same key, a new handler
1063 from further up the call chain is invoked.
1064
1065 If the key is @code{#t}, then a throw to @emph{any} symbol will
1066 match this call to @code{catch}.
1067
1068 If a @var{pre-unwind-handler} is given and @var{thunk} throws
1069 an exception that matches @var{key}, Guile calls the
1070 @var{pre-unwind-handler} before unwinding the dynamic state and
1071 invoking the main @var{handler}. @var{pre-unwind-handler} should
1072 be a procedure with the same signature as @var{handler}, that
1073 is @code{(lambda (key . args))}. It is typically used to save
1074 the stack at the point where the exception occurred, but can also
1075 query other parts of the dynamic state at that point, such as
1076 fluid values.
1077
1078 A @var{pre-unwind-handler} can exit either normally or non-locally.
1079 If it exits normally, Guile unwinds the stack and dynamic context
1080 and then calls the normal (third argument) handler. If it exits
1081 non-locally, that exit determines the continuation.
1082 @end deffn
1083
1084 If a handler procedure needs to match a variety of @code{throw}
1085 expressions with varying numbers of arguments, you should write it like
1086 this:
1087
1088 @lisp
1089 (lambda (key . args)
1090 @dots{})
1091 @end lisp
1092
1093 @noindent
1094 The @var{key} argument is guaranteed always to be present, because a
1095 @code{throw} without a @var{key} is not valid. The number and
1096 interpretation of the @var{args} varies from one type of exception to
1097 another, but should be specified by the documentation for each exception
1098 type.
1099
1100 Note that, once the normal (post-unwind) handler procedure is invoked,
1101 the catch that led to the handler procedure being called is no longer
1102 active. Therefore, if the handler procedure itself throws an exception,
1103 that exception can only be caught by another active catch higher up the
1104 call stack, if there is one.
1105
1106 @sp 1
1107 @deftypefn {C Function} SCM scm_c_catch (SCM tag, scm_t_catch_body body, void *body_data, scm_t_catch_handler handler, void *handler_data, scm_t_catch_handler pre_unwind_handler, void *pre_unwind_handler_data)
1108 @deftypefnx {C Function} SCM scm_internal_catch (SCM tag, scm_t_catch_body body, void *body_data, scm_t_catch_handler handler, void *handler_data)
1109 The above @code{scm_catch_with_pre_unwind_handler} and @code{scm_catch}
1110 take Scheme procedures as body and handler arguments.
1111 @code{scm_c_catch} and @code{scm_internal_catch} are equivalents taking
1112 C functions.
1113
1114 @var{body} is called as @code{@var{body} (@var{body_data})} with a catch
1115 on exceptions of the given @var{tag} type. If an exception is caught,
1116 @var{pre_unwind_handler} and @var{handler} are called as
1117 @code{@var{handler} (@var{handler_data}, @var{key}, @var{args})}.
1118 @var{key} and @var{args} are the @code{SCM} key and argument list from
1119 the @code{throw}.
1120
1121 @tpindex scm_t_catch_body
1122 @tpindex scm_t_catch_handler
1123 @var{body} and @var{handler} should have the following prototypes.
1124 @code{scm_t_catch_body} and @code{scm_t_catch_handler} are pointer
1125 typedefs for these.
1126
1127 @example
1128 SCM body (void *data);
1129 SCM handler (void *data, SCM key, SCM args);
1130 @end example
1131
1132 The @var{body_data} and @var{handler_data} parameters are passed to
1133 the respective calls so an application can communicate extra
1134 information to those functions.
1135
1136 If the data consists of an @code{SCM} object, care should be taken
1137 that it isn't garbage collected while still required. If the
1138 @code{SCM} is a local C variable, one way to protect it is to pass a
1139 pointer to that variable as the data parameter, since the C compiler
1140 will then know the value must be held on the stack. Another way is to
1141 use @code{scm_remember_upto_here_1} (@pxref{Remembering During
1142 Operations}).
1143 @end deftypefn
1144
1145
1146 @node Throw Handlers
1147 @subsubsection Throw Handlers
1148
1149 It's sometimes useful to be able to intercept an exception that is being
1150 thrown before the stack is unwound. This could be to clean up some
1151 related state, to print a backtrace, or to pass information about the
1152 exception to a debugger, for example. The @code{with-throw-handler}
1153 procedure provides a way to do this.
1154
1155 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} with-throw-handler key thunk handler
1156 @deffnx {C Function} scm_with_throw_handler (key, thunk, handler)
1157 Add @var{handler} to the dynamic context as a throw handler
1158 for key @var{key}, then invoke @var{thunk}.
1159
1160 This behaves exactly like @code{catch}, except that it does not unwind
1161 the stack before invoking @var{handler}. If the @var{handler} procedure
1162 returns normally, Guile rethrows the same exception again to the next
1163 innermost catch or throw handler. @var{handler} may exit nonlocally, of
1164 course, via an explicit throw or via invoking a continuation.
1165 @end deffn
1166
1167 Typically @var{handler} is used to display a backtrace of the stack at
1168 the point where the corresponding @code{throw} occurred, or to save off
1169 this information for possible display later.
1170
1171 Not unwinding the stack means that throwing an exception that is handled
1172 via a throw handler is equivalent to calling the throw handler handler
1173 inline instead of each @code{throw}, and then omitting the surrounding
1174 @code{with-throw-handler}. In other words,
1175
1176 @lisp
1177 (with-throw-handler 'key
1178 (lambda () @dots{} (throw 'key args @dots{}) @dots{})
1179 handler)
1180 @end lisp
1181
1182 @noindent
1183 is mostly equivalent to
1184
1185 @lisp
1186 ((lambda () @dots{} (handler 'key args @dots{}) @dots{}))
1187 @end lisp
1188
1189 In particular, the dynamic context when @var{handler} is invoked is that
1190 of the site where @code{throw} is called. The examples are not quite
1191 equivalent, because the body of a @code{with-throw-handler} is not in
1192 tail position with respect to the @code{with-throw-handler}, and if
1193 @var{handler} exits normally, Guile arranges to rethrow the error, but
1194 hopefully the intention is clear. (For an introduction to what is meant
1195 by dynamic context, @xref{Dynamic Wind}.)
1196
1197 @deftypefn {C Function} SCM scm_c_with_throw_handler (SCM tag, scm_t_catch_body body, void *body_data, scm_t_catch_handler handler, void *handler_data, int lazy_catch_p)
1198 The above @code{scm_with_throw_handler} takes Scheme procedures as body
1199 (thunk) and handler arguments. @code{scm_c_with_throw_handler} is an
1200 equivalent taking C functions. See @code{scm_c_catch} (@pxref{Catch})
1201 for a description of the parameters, the behaviour however of course
1202 follows @code{with-throw-handler}.
1203 @end deftypefn
1204
1205 If @var{thunk} throws an exception, Guile handles that exception by
1206 invoking the innermost @code{catch} or throw handler whose key matches
1207 that of the exception. When the innermost thing is a throw handler,
1208 Guile calls the specified handler procedure using @code{(apply
1209 @var{handler} key args)}. The handler procedure may either return
1210 normally or exit non-locally. If it returns normally, Guile passes the
1211 exception on to the next innermost @code{catch} or throw handler. If it
1212 exits non-locally, that exit determines the continuation.
1213
1214 The behaviour of a throw handler is very similar to that of a
1215 @code{catch} expression's optional pre-unwind handler. In particular, a
1216 throw handler's handler procedure is invoked in the exact dynamic
1217 context of the @code{throw} expression, just as a pre-unwind handler is.
1218 @code{with-throw-handler} may be seen as a half-@code{catch}: it does
1219 everything that a @code{catch} would do until the point where
1220 @code{catch} would start unwinding the stack and dynamic context, but
1221 then it rethrows to the next innermost @code{catch} or throw handler
1222 instead.
1223
1224 Note also that since the dynamic context is not unwound, if a
1225 @code{with-throw-handler} handler throws to a key that does not match
1226 the @code{with-throw-handler} expression's @var{key}, the new throw may
1227 be handled by a @code{catch} or throw handler that is @emph{closer} to
1228 the throw than the first @code{with-throw-handler}.
1229
1230 Here is an example to illustrate this behavior:
1231
1232 @lisp
1233 (catch 'a
1234 (lambda ()
1235 (with-throw-handler 'b
1236 (lambda ()
1237 (catch 'a
1238 (lambda ()
1239 (throw 'b))
1240 inner-handler))
1241 (lambda (key . args)
1242 (throw 'a))))
1243 outer-handler)
1244 @end lisp
1245
1246 @noindent
1247 This code will call @code{inner-handler} and then continue with the
1248 continuation of the inner @code{catch}.
1249
1250
1251 @node Throw
1252 @subsubsection Throwing Exceptions
1253
1254 The @code{throw} primitive is used to throw an exception. One argument,
1255 the @var{key}, is mandatory, and must be a symbol; it indicates the type
1256 of exception that is being thrown. Following the @var{key},
1257 @code{throw} accepts any number of additional arguments, whose meaning
1258 depends on the exception type. The documentation for each possible type
1259 of exception should specify the additional arguments that are expected
1260 for that kind of exception.
1261
1262 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} throw key arg @dots{}
1263 @deffnx {C Function} scm_throw (key, args)
1264 Invoke the catch form matching @var{key}, passing @var{arg} @dots{} to
1265 the @var{handler}.
1266
1267 @var{key} is a symbol. It will match catches of the same symbol or of
1268 @code{#t}.
1269
1270 If there is no handler at all, Guile prints an error and then exits.
1271 @end deffn
1272
1273 When an exception is thrown, it will be caught by the innermost
1274 @code{catch} or throw handler that applies to the type of the thrown
1275 exception; in other words, whose @var{key} is either @code{#t} or the
1276 same symbol as that used in the @code{throw} expression. Once Guile has
1277 identified the appropriate @code{catch} or throw handler, it handles the
1278 exception by applying the relevant handler procedure(s) to the arguments
1279 of the @code{throw}.
1280
1281 If there is no appropriate @code{catch} or throw handler for a thrown
1282 exception, Guile prints an error to the current error port indicating an
1283 uncaught exception, and then exits. In practice, it is quite difficult
1284 to observe this behaviour, because Guile when used interactively
1285 installs a top level @code{catch} handler that will catch all exceptions
1286 and print an appropriate error message @emph{without} exiting. For
1287 example, this is what happens if you try to throw an unhandled exception
1288 in the standard Guile REPL; note that Guile's command loop continues
1289 after the error message:
1290
1291 @lisp
1292 guile> (throw 'badex)
1293 <unnamed port>:3:1: In procedure gsubr-apply @dots{}
1294 <unnamed port>:3:1: unhandled-exception: badex
1295 ABORT: (misc-error)
1296 guile>
1297 @end lisp
1298
1299 The default uncaught exception behaviour can be observed by evaluating a
1300 @code{throw} expression from the shell command line:
1301
1302 @example
1303 $ guile -c "(begin (throw 'badex) (display \"here\\n\"))"
1304 guile: uncaught throw to badex: ()
1305 $
1306 @end example
1307
1308 @noindent
1309 That Guile exits immediately following the uncaught exception
1310 is shown by the absence of any output from the @code{display}
1311 expression, because Guile never gets to the point of evaluating that
1312 expression.
1313
1314
1315 @node Exception Implementation
1316 @subsubsection How Guile Implements Exceptions
1317
1318 It is traditional in Scheme to implement exception systems using
1319 @code{call-with-current-continuation}. Continuations
1320 (@pxref{Continuations}) are such a powerful concept that any other
1321 control mechanism --- including @code{catch} and @code{throw} --- can be
1322 implemented in terms of them.
1323
1324 Guile does not implement @code{catch} and @code{throw} like this,
1325 though. Why not? Because Guile is specifically designed to be easy to
1326 integrate with applications written in C. In a mixed Scheme/C
1327 environment, the concept of @dfn{continuation} must logically include
1328 ``what happens next'' in the C parts of the application as well as the
1329 Scheme parts, and it turns out that the only reasonable way of
1330 implementing continuations like this is to save and restore the complete
1331 C stack.
1332
1333 So Guile's implementation of @code{call-with-current-continuation} is a
1334 stack copying one. This allows it to interact well with ordinary C
1335 code, but means that creating and calling a continuation is slowed down
1336 by the time that it takes to copy the C stack.
1337
1338 The more targeted mechanism provided by @code{catch} and @code{throw}
1339 does not need to save and restore the C stack because the @code{throw}
1340 always jumps to a location higher up the stack of the code that executes
1341 the @code{throw}. Therefore Guile implements the @code{catch} and
1342 @code{throw} primitives independently of
1343 @code{call-with-current-continuation}, in a way that takes advantage of
1344 this @emph{upwards only} nature of exceptions.
1345
1346
1347 @node Error Reporting
1348 @subsection Procedures for Signaling Errors
1349
1350 Guile provides a set of convenience procedures for signaling error
1351 conditions that are implemented on top of the exception primitives just
1352 described.
1353
1354 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} error msg arg @dots{}
1355 Raise an error with key @code{misc-error} and a message constructed by
1356 displaying @var{msg} and writing @var{arg} @enddots{}.
1357 @end deffn
1358
1359 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} scm-error key subr message args data
1360 @deffnx {C Function} scm_error_scm (key, subr, message, args, data)
1361 Raise an error with key @var{key}. @var{subr} can be a string
1362 naming the procedure associated with the error, or @code{#f}.
1363 @var{message} is the error message string, possibly containing
1364 @code{~S} and @code{~A} escapes. When an error is reported,
1365 these are replaced by formatting the corresponding members of
1366 @var{args}: @code{~A} (was @code{%s} in older versions of
1367 Guile) formats using @code{display} and @code{~S} (was
1368 @code{%S}) formats using @code{write}. @var{data} is a list or
1369 @code{#f} depending on @var{key}: if @var{key} is
1370 @code{system-error} then it should be a list containing the
1371 Unix @code{errno} value; If @var{key} is @code{signal} then it
1372 should be a list containing the Unix signal number; If
1373 @var{key} is @code{out-of-range} or @code{wrong-type-arg},
1374 it is a list containing the bad value; otherwise
1375 it will usually be @code{#f}.
1376 @end deffn
1377
1378 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} strerror err
1379 @deffnx {C Function} scm_strerror (err)
1380 Return the Unix error message corresponding to @var{err}, an integer
1381 @code{errno} value.
1382
1383 When @code{setlocale} has been called (@pxref{Locales}), the message
1384 is in the language and charset of @code{LC_MESSAGES}. (This is done
1385 by the C library.)
1386 @end deffn
1387
1388 @c begin (scm-doc-string "boot-9.scm" "false-if-exception")
1389 @deffn syntax false-if-exception expr
1390 Returns the result of evaluating its argument; however
1391 if an exception occurs then @code{#f} is returned instead.
1392 @end deffn
1393 @c end
1394
1395
1396 @node Dynamic Wind
1397 @subsection Dynamic Wind
1398
1399 For Scheme code, the fundamental procedure to react to non-local entry
1400 and exits of dynamic contexts is @code{dynamic-wind}. C code could
1401 use @code{scm_internal_dynamic_wind}, but since C does not allow the
1402 convenient construction of anonymous procedures that close over
1403 lexical variables, this will be, well, inconvenient.
1404
1405 Therefore, Guile offers the functions @code{scm_dynwind_begin} and
1406 @code{scm_dynwind_end} to delimit a dynamic extent. Within this
1407 dynamic extent, which is called a @dfn{dynwind context}, you can
1408 perform various @dfn{dynwind actions} that control what happens when
1409 the dynwind context is entered or left. For example, you can register
1410 a cleanup routine with @code{scm_dynwind_unwind_handler} that is
1411 executed when the context is left. There are several other more
1412 specialized dynwind actions as well, for example to temporarily block
1413 the execution of asyncs or to temporarily change the current output
1414 port. They are described elsewhere in this manual.
1415
1416 Here is an example that shows how to prevent memory leaks.
1417
1418 @example
1419
1420 /* Suppose there is a function called FOO in some library that you
1421 would like to make available to Scheme code (or to C code that
1422 follows the Scheme conventions).
1423
1424 FOO takes two C strings and returns a new string. When an error has
1425 occurred in FOO, it returns NULL.
1426 */
1427
1428 char *foo (char *s1, char *s2);
1429
1430 /* SCM_FOO interfaces the C function FOO to the Scheme way of life.
1431 It takes care to free up all temporary strings in the case of
1432 non-local exits.
1433 */
1434
1435 SCM
1436 scm_foo (SCM s1, SCM s2)
1437 @{
1438 char *c_s1, *c_s2, *c_res;
1439
1440 scm_dynwind_begin (0);
1441
1442 c_s1 = scm_to_locale_string (s1);
1443
1444 /* Call 'free (c_s1)' when the dynwind context is left.
1445 */
1446 scm_dynwind_unwind_handler (free, c_s1, SCM_F_WIND_EXPLICITLY);
1447
1448 c_s2 = scm_to_locale_string (s2);
1449
1450 /* Same as above, but more concisely.
1451 */
1452 scm_dynwind_free (c_s2);
1453
1454 c_res = foo (c_s1, c_s2);
1455 if (c_res == NULL)
1456 scm_memory_error ("foo");
1457
1458 scm_dynwind_end ();
1459
1460 return scm_take_locale_string (res);
1461 @}
1462 @end example
1463
1464 @rnindex dynamic-wind
1465 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dynamic-wind in_guard thunk out_guard
1466 @deffnx {C Function} scm_dynamic_wind (in_guard, thunk, out_guard)
1467 All three arguments must be 0-argument procedures.
1468 @var{in_guard} is called, then @var{thunk}, then
1469 @var{out_guard}.
1470
1471 If, any time during the execution of @var{thunk}, the
1472 dynamic extent of the @code{dynamic-wind} expression is escaped
1473 non-locally, @var{out_guard} is called. If the dynamic extent of
1474 the dynamic-wind is re-entered, @var{in_guard} is called. Thus
1475 @var{in_guard} and @var{out_guard} may be called any number of
1476 times.
1477
1478 @lisp
1479 (define x 'normal-binding)
1480 @result{} x
1481 (define a-cont
1482 (call-with-current-continuation
1483 (lambda (escape)
1484 (let ((old-x x))
1485 (dynamic-wind
1486 ;; in-guard:
1487 ;;
1488 (lambda () (set! x 'special-binding))
1489
1490 ;; thunk
1491 ;;
1492 (lambda () (display x) (newline)
1493 (call-with-current-continuation escape)
1494 (display x) (newline)
1495 x)
1496
1497 ;; out-guard:
1498 ;;
1499 (lambda () (set! x old-x)))))))
1500 ;; Prints:
1501 special-binding
1502 ;; Evaluates to:
1503 @result{} a-cont
1504 x
1505 @result{} normal-binding
1506 (a-cont #f)
1507 ;; Prints:
1508 special-binding
1509 ;; Evaluates to:
1510 @result{} a-cont ;; the value of the (define a-cont...)
1511 x
1512 @result{} normal-binding
1513 a-cont
1514 @result{} special-binding
1515 @end lisp
1516 @end deffn
1517
1518 @deftp {C Type} scm_t_dynwind_flags
1519 This is an enumeration of several flags that modify the behavior of
1520 @code{scm_dynwind_begin}. The flags are listed in the following
1521 table.
1522
1523 @table @code
1524 @item SCM_F_DYNWIND_REWINDABLE
1525 The dynamic context is @dfn{rewindable}. This means that it can be
1526 reentered non-locally (via the invocation of a continuation). The
1527 default is that a dynwind context can not be reentered non-locally.
1528 @end table
1529
1530 @end deftp
1531
1532 @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_dynwind_begin (scm_t_dynwind_flags flags)
1533 The function @code{scm_dynwind_begin} starts a new dynamic context and
1534 makes it the `current' one.
1535
1536 The @var{flags} argument determines the default behavior of the
1537 context. Normally, use 0. This will result in a context that can not
1538 be reentered with a captured continuation. When you are prepared to
1539 handle reentries, include @code{SCM_F_DYNWIND_REWINDABLE} in
1540 @var{flags}.
1541
1542 Being prepared for reentry means that the effects of unwind handlers
1543 can be undone on reentry. In the example above, we want to prevent a
1544 memory leak on non-local exit and thus register an unwind handler that
1545 frees the memory. But once the memory is freed, we can not get it
1546 back on reentry. Thus reentry can not be allowed.
1547
1548 The consequence is that continuations become less useful when
1549 non-reentrant contexts are captured, but you don't need to worry
1550 about that too much.
1551
1552 The context is ended either implicitly when a non-local exit happens,
1553 or explicitly with @code{scm_dynwind_end}. You must make sure that a
1554 dynwind context is indeed ended properly. If you fail to call
1555 @code{scm_dynwind_end} for each @code{scm_dynwind_begin}, the behavior
1556 is undefined.
1557 @end deftypefn
1558
1559 @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_dynwind_end ()
1560 End the current dynamic context explicitly and make the previous one
1561 current.
1562 @end deftypefn
1563
1564 @deftp {C Type} scm_t_wind_flags
1565 This is an enumeration of several flags that modify the behavior of
1566 @code{scm_dynwind_unwind_handler} and
1567 @code{scm_dynwind_rewind_handler}. The flags are listed in the
1568 following table.
1569
1570 @table @code
1571 @item SCM_F_WIND_EXPLICITLY
1572 @vindex SCM_F_WIND_EXPLICITLY
1573 The registered action is also carried out when the dynwind context is
1574 entered or left locally.
1575 @end table
1576 @end deftp
1577
1578 @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_dynwind_unwind_handler (void (*func)(void *), void *data, scm_t_wind_flags flags)
1579 @deftypefnx {C Function} void scm_dynwind_unwind_handler_with_scm (void (*func)(SCM), SCM data, scm_t_wind_flags flags)
1580 Arranges for @var{func} to be called with @var{data} as its arguments
1581 when the current context ends implicitly. If @var{flags} contains
1582 @code{SCM_F_WIND_EXPLICITLY}, @var{func} is also called when the
1583 context ends explicitly with @code{scm_dynwind_end}.
1584
1585 The function @code{scm_dynwind_unwind_handler_with_scm} takes care that
1586 @var{data} is protected from garbage collection.
1587 @end deftypefn
1588
1589 @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_dynwind_rewind_handler (void (*func)(void *), void *data, scm_t_wind_flags flags)
1590 @deftypefnx {C Function} void scm_dynwind_rewind_handler_with_scm (void (*func)(SCM), SCM data, scm_t_wind_flags flags)
1591 Arrange for @var{func} to be called with @var{data} as its argument when
1592 the current context is restarted by rewinding the stack. When @var{flags}
1593 contains @code{SCM_F_WIND_EXPLICITLY}, @var{func} is called immediately
1594 as well.
1595
1596 The function @code{scm_dynwind_rewind_handler_with_scm} takes care that
1597 @var{data} is protected from garbage collection.
1598 @end deftypefn
1599
1600 @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_dynwind_free (void *mem)
1601 Arrange for @var{mem} to be freed automatically whenever the current
1602 context is exited, whether normally or non-locally.
1603 @code{scm_dynwind_free (mem)} is an equivalent shorthand for
1604 @code{scm_dynwind_unwind_handler (free, mem, SCM_F_WIND_EXPLICITLY)}.
1605 @end deftypefn
1606
1607
1608 @node Handling Errors
1609 @subsection How to Handle Errors
1610
1611 Error handling is based on @code{catch} and @code{throw}. Errors are
1612 always thrown with a @var{key} and four arguments:
1613
1614 @itemize @bullet
1615 @item
1616 @var{key}: a symbol which indicates the type of error. The symbols used
1617 by libguile are listed below.
1618
1619 @item
1620 @var{subr}: the name of the procedure from which the error is thrown, or
1621 @code{#f}.
1622
1623 @item
1624 @var{message}: a string (possibly language and system dependent)
1625 describing the error. The tokens @code{~A} and @code{~S} can be
1626 embedded within the message: they will be replaced with members of the
1627 @var{args} list when the message is printed. @code{~A} indicates an
1628 argument printed using @code{display}, while @code{~S} indicates an
1629 argument printed using @code{write}. @var{message} can also be
1630 @code{#f}, to allow it to be derived from the @var{key} by the error
1631 handler (may be useful if the @var{key} is to be thrown from both C and
1632 Scheme).
1633
1634 @item
1635 @var{args}: a list of arguments to be used to expand @code{~A} and
1636 @code{~S} tokens in @var{message}. Can also be @code{#f} if no
1637 arguments are required.
1638
1639 @item
1640 @var{rest}: a list of any additional objects required. e.g., when the
1641 key is @code{'system-error}, this contains the C errno value. Can also
1642 be @code{#f} if no additional objects are required.
1643 @end itemize
1644
1645 In addition to @code{catch} and @code{throw}, the following Scheme
1646 facilities are available:
1647
1648 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} display-error frame port subr message args rest
1649 @deffnx {C Function} scm_display_error (frame, port, subr, message, args, rest)
1650 Display an error message to the output port @var{port}.
1651 @var{frame} is the frame in which the error occurred, @var{subr} is
1652 the name of the procedure in which the error occurred and
1653 @var{message} is the actual error message, which may contain
1654 formatting instructions. These will format the arguments in
1655 the list @var{args} accordingly. @var{rest} is currently
1656 ignored.
1657 @end deffn
1658
1659 The following are the error keys defined by libguile and the situations
1660 in which they are used:
1661
1662 @itemize @bullet
1663 @item
1664 @cindex @code{error-signal}
1665 @code{error-signal}: thrown after receiving an unhandled fatal signal
1666 such as SIGSEGV, SIGBUS, SIGFPE etc. The @var{rest} argument in the throw
1667 contains the coded signal number (at present this is not the same as the
1668 usual Unix signal number).
1669
1670 @item
1671 @cindex @code{system-error}
1672 @code{system-error}: thrown after the operating system indicates an
1673 error condition. The @var{rest} argument in the throw contains the
1674 errno value.
1675
1676 @item
1677 @cindex @code{numerical-overflow}
1678 @code{numerical-overflow}: numerical overflow.
1679
1680 @item
1681 @cindex @code{out-of-range}
1682 @code{out-of-range}: the arguments to a procedure do not fall within the
1683 accepted domain.
1684
1685 @item
1686 @cindex @code{wrong-type-arg}
1687 @code{wrong-type-arg}: an argument to a procedure has the wrong type.
1688
1689 @item
1690 @cindex @code{wrong-number-of-args}
1691 @code{wrong-number-of-args}: a procedure was called with the wrong number
1692 of arguments.
1693
1694 @item
1695 @cindex @code{memory-allocation-error}
1696 @code{memory-allocation-error}: memory allocation error.
1697
1698 @item
1699 @cindex @code{stack-overflow}
1700 @code{stack-overflow}: stack overflow error.
1701
1702 @item
1703 @cindex @code{regular-expression-syntax}
1704 @code{regular-expression-syntax}: errors generated by the regular
1705 expression library.
1706
1707 @item
1708 @cindex @code{misc-error}
1709 @code{misc-error}: other errors.
1710 @end itemize
1711
1712
1713 @subsubsection C Support
1714
1715 In the following C functions, @var{SUBR} and @var{MESSAGE} parameters
1716 can be @code{NULL} to give the effect of @code{#f} described above.
1717
1718 @deftypefn {C Function} SCM scm_error (SCM @var{key}, char *@var{subr}, char *@var{message}, SCM @var{args}, SCM @var{rest})
1719 Throw an error, as per @code{scm-error} (@pxref{Error Reporting}).
1720 @end deftypefn
1721
1722 @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_syserror (char *@var{subr})
1723 @deftypefnx {C Function} void scm_syserror_msg (char *@var{subr}, char *@var{message}, SCM @var{args})
1724 Throw an error with key @code{system-error} and supply @code{errno} in
1725 the @var{rest} argument. For @code{scm_syserror} the message is
1726 generated using @code{strerror}.
1727
1728 Care should be taken that any code in between the failing operation
1729 and the call to these routines doesn't change @code{errno}.
1730 @end deftypefn
1731
1732 @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_num_overflow (char *@var{subr})
1733 @deftypefnx {C Function} void scm_out_of_range (char *@var{subr}, SCM @var{bad_value})
1734 @deftypefnx {C Function} void scm_wrong_num_args (SCM @var{proc})
1735 @deftypefnx {C Function} void scm_wrong_type_arg (char *@var{subr}, int @var{argnum}, SCM @var{bad_value})
1736 @deftypefnx {C Function} void scm_wrong_type_arg_msg (char *@var{subr}, int @var{argnum}, SCM @var{bad_value}, const char *@var{expected})
1737 @deftypefnx {C Function} void scm_memory_error (char *@var{subr})
1738 @deftypefnx {C Function} void scm_misc_error (const char *@var{subr}, const char *@var{message}, SCM @var{args})
1739 Throw an error with the various keys described above.
1740
1741 In @code{scm_wrong_num_args}, @var{proc} should be a Scheme symbol
1742 which is the name of the procedure incorrectly invoked. The other
1743 routines take the name of the invoked procedure as a C string.
1744
1745 In @code{scm_wrong_type_arg_msg}, @var{expected} is a C string
1746 describing the type of argument that was expected.
1747
1748 In @code{scm_misc_error}, @var{message} is the error message string,
1749 possibly containing @code{simple-format} escapes (@pxref{Writing}), and
1750 the corresponding arguments in the @var{args} list.
1751 @end deftypefn
1752
1753
1754 @subsubsection Signalling Type Errors
1755
1756 Every function visible at the Scheme level should aggressively check the
1757 types of its arguments, to avoid misinterpreting a value, and perhaps
1758 causing a segmentation fault. Guile provides some macros to make this
1759 easier.
1760
1761 @deftypefn Macro void SCM_ASSERT (int @var{test}, SCM @var{obj}, unsigned int @var{position}, const char *@var{subr})
1762 @deftypefnx Macro void SCM_ASSERT_TYPE (int @var{test}, SCM @var{obj}, unsigned int @var{position}, const char *@var{subr}, const char *@var{expected})
1763 If @var{test} is zero, signal a ``wrong type argument'' error,
1764 attributed to the subroutine named @var{subr}, operating on the value
1765 @var{obj}, which is the @var{position}'th argument of @var{subr}.
1766
1767 In @code{SCM_ASSERT_TYPE}, @var{expected} is a C string describing the
1768 type of argument that was expected.
1769 @end deftypefn
1770
1771 @deftypefn Macro int SCM_ARG1
1772 @deftypefnx Macro int SCM_ARG2
1773 @deftypefnx Macro int SCM_ARG3
1774 @deftypefnx Macro int SCM_ARG4
1775 @deftypefnx Macro int SCM_ARG5
1776 @deftypefnx Macro int SCM_ARG6
1777 @deftypefnx Macro int SCM_ARG7
1778 One of the above values can be used for @var{position} to indicate the
1779 number of the argument of @var{subr} which is being checked.
1780 Alternatively, a positive integer number can be used, which allows to
1781 check arguments after the seventh. However, for parameter numbers up to
1782 seven it is preferable to use @code{SCM_ARGN} instead of the
1783 corresponding raw number, since it will make the code easier to
1784 understand.
1785 @end deftypefn
1786
1787 @deftypefn Macro int SCM_ARGn
1788 Passing a value of zero or @code{SCM_ARGn} for @var{position} allows to
1789 leave it unspecified which argument's type is incorrect. Again,
1790 @code{SCM_ARGn} should be preferred over a raw zero constant.
1791 @end deftypefn
1792
1793 @node Continuation Barriers
1794 @subsection Continuation Barriers
1795
1796 The non-local flow of control caused by continuations might sometimes
1797 not be wanted. You can use @code{with-continuation-barrier} to erect
1798 fences that continuations can not pass.
1799
1800 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} with-continuation-barrier proc
1801 @deffnx {C Function} scm_with_continuation_barrier (proc)
1802 Call @var{proc} and return its result. Do not allow the invocation of
1803 continuations that would leave or enter the dynamic extent of the call
1804 to @code{with-continuation-barrier}. Such an attempt causes an error
1805 to be signaled.
1806
1807 Throws (such as errors) that are not caught from within @var{proc} are
1808 caught by @code{with-continuation-barrier}. In that case, a short
1809 message is printed to the current error port and @code{#f} is returned.
1810
1811 Thus, @code{with-continuation-barrier} returns exactly once.
1812 @end deffn
1813
1814 @deftypefn {C Function} {void *} scm_c_with_continuation_barrier (void *(*func) (void *), void *data)
1815 Like @code{scm_with_continuation_barrier} but call @var{func} on
1816 @var{data}. When an error is caught, @code{NULL} is returned.
1817 @end deftypefn
1818
1819
1820 @c Local Variables:
1821 @c TeX-master: "guile.texi"
1822 @c End: