File:
[gforth] /
gforth /
objects.fs
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1.3:
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Fri Jun 6 17:27:57 1997 UTC (26 years, 3 months ago) by
anton
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MAIN
CVS tags:
HEAD
Environmental query "gforth" now returns the version-string
dictionary-end and unused moved into the kernel/basics.fs
Minor gforth.el bug fixes
Major rewrite of objects.fs (not yet done)
fixed -trailing bug (with test in test/other.fs)
optimization of fields with offset 0 in struct.fs and compat/struct.fs
other changes in compat/struct.fs (not yet done)
added ansreports to compat/*.fs
documentation changes
allot now checks for dict overflow
named [IS] (compilation semantics of IS).
minor changes
\ yet another Forth objects extension
\ written by Anton Ertl 1996, 1997
\ public domain
\ This (in combination with compat/struct.fs) is in ANS Forth (with an
\ environmental dependence on case insensitivity; convert everything
\ to upper case for state sensitive systems).
\ If you don't use Gforth, you have to load compat/struct.fs first.
\ compat/struct.fs and this file together use the following words:
\ from CORE :
\ : 1- + swap invert and ; DOES> @ immediate drop Create >r rot r@ dup
\ , IF ELSE THEN r> chars cells 2* here - allot over execute POSTPONE
\ ?dup 2dup move 2! Variable 2@ ! ['] >body = 2drop ' +! Constant
\ recurse 1+ BEGIN 0= UNTIL negate Literal ." .
\ from CORE-EXT :
\ tuck nip true <> 0> erase Value :noname compile,
\ from BLOCK-EXT :
\ \
\ from DOUBLE :
\ 2Constant
\ from EXCEPTION :
\ throw catch
\ from EXCEPTION-EXT :
\ abort"
\ from FILE :
\ (
\ from FLOAT :
\ floats
\ from FLOAT-EXT :
\ dfloats sfloats
\ from LOCAL :
\ TO
\ from MEMORY :
\ allocate resize free
\ from SEARCH :
\ get-order set-order wordlist get-current set-current
\ ---------------------------------------
\ MANUAL:
\ A class is defined like this:
\ <parent> class
\ ... field <name>
\ ...
\ ... inst-var <name>
\ ...
\ selector <name>
\ :noname ( ... object -- ... )
\ ... ;
\ method <name> \ new method
\ ...
\ :noname ( ... object -- ... )
\ ... ;
\ overrides <name> \ existing method
\ ...
\ end-class <name>
\ you can write fields, inst-vars, selectors, methods and overrides in
\ any order.
\ A call of a method looks like this:
\ ... <object> <method>
\ (<object> just needs to reside on the stack, there's no need to name it).
\ Instead of defining a method with ':noname ... ;', you can define it
\ also with 'm: ... ;m'. The difference is that with ':noname' the
\ "self" object is on the top of stack; with 'm:' you can get it with
\ 'this'. You should use 'this' only in an 'm:' method even though the
\ sample implementation does not enforce this.
\ The difference between a field and and inst-var is that the field
\ refers to an object at the top of data stack (i.e. a field has the
\ stack effect (object -- addr), whereas the inst-var refers to this
\ (i.e., it has the stack effect ( -- addr )); obviously, an inst-var
\ can only be used in an 'm:' method.
\ 'method' defines a new method selector and binds a method to it.
\ 'selector' defines a new method selector without binding a method to
\ it (you can use this to define abstract classes)
\ 'overrides' binds a different method (than the parent class) to an
\ existing method selector.
\ If you want to perform early binding, you can do it like this:
\ ... <object> [bind] <class> <method> \ compilation
\ ... <object> bind <class> <method> \ interpretation
\ You can get at the method from the method selector and the class like
\ this:
\ bind' <class> <method>
\ An interface is defined like this:
\ interface
\ selector <name>
\ : noname ( ... object -- ... )
\ ... ;
\ method <name>
\ ...
\ end-interface <name>
\ You can only define new selectors in an interface definition, no
\ fields or instance variables. If you define a selector with
\ 'method', the corresponding method becomes the default method for
\ this selector.
\ An interface is used like this:
\ <parent> class
\ <interface> implementation
\ <interface> implementation
\ :noname ( ... -- ... )
\ ... ;
\ overrides <selector>
\ end-class name
\ a class inherits all interfaces of its parent. An 'implementation'
\ means that the class also implements the specified interface (If the
\ interface is already implemented by the parent class, an
\ 'implementation' phrase resets the methods to the defaults.
\ 'overrides' can also be used to override interface methods. It has
\ to be used after announcing the 'implementation' of the
\ interface. Apart from this, 'implementation' can be freely mixed
\ with the other stuff (but I recommend to put all 'implementation'
\ phrases at the beginning of the class definition).
\ \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
\ needs struct.fs
\ helper words
: -rot ( a b c -- c a b )
rot rot ;
: under+ ( a b c -- a+b c )
rot + swap ;
: perform ( ... addr -- ... )
@ execute ;
: ?dup-if ( compilation: -- orig ; run-time: n -- n| )
POSTPONE ?dup POSTPONE if ; immediate
: save-mem ( addr1 u -- addr2 u ) \ gforth
\ copy a memory block into a newly allocated region in the heap
swap >r
dup allocate throw
swap 2dup r> -rot move ;
: resize ( a-addr1 u -- a-addr2 ior ) \ gforth
over
if
resize
else
nip allocate
then ;
: extend-mem ( addr1 u1 u -- addr addr2 u2 )
\ extend memory block allocated from the heap by u aus
\ the (possibly reallocated piece is addr2 u2, the extension is at addr )
over >r + dup >r resize throw
r> over r> + -rot ;
: 2, ( w1 w2 -- ) \ gforth
here 2 cells allot 2! ;
\ data structures
struct
1 cells: field object-map
end-struct object-struct
struct
2 cells: field interface-map
1 cells: field interface-map-offset \ aus
\ difference between where interface-map points and where
\ object-map points (0 for non-classes)
1 cells: field interface-offset \ aus
\ offset of interface map-pointer in class-map (0 for classes)
end-struct interface-struct
interface-struct
1 cells: field class-parent
1 cells: field class-wordlist \ instance variables and other private words
2 cells: field class-inst-size \ size and alignment
end-struct class-struct
struct
1 cells: field selector-offset \ the offset within the (interface) map
1 cells: field selector-interface \ the interface offset
end-struct selector-struct
\ maps are not defined explicitly; they have the following structure:
\ pointers to interface maps (for classes) <- interface-map points here
\ interface/class-struct pointer <- (object-)map points here
\ xts of methods
\ code
\ selectors and methods
variable current-interface
: no-method ( -- )
true abort" no method defined for this object/selector combination" ;
: do-class-method ( -- )
does> ( ... object -- ... )
( object )
selector-offset @ over object-map @ + ( object xtp ) perform ;
: do-interface-method ( -- )
does> ( ... object -- ... )
( object selector-body )
2dup selector-interface @ ( object selector-body object interface-offset )
swap object-map @ + @ ( object selector-body map )
swap selector-offset @ + perform ;
: method ( xt "name" -- )
\ define selector with method xt
create
current-interface @ interface-map 2@ ( xt map-addr map-size )
dup current-interface @ interface-map-offset @ - ,
1 cells extend-mem current-interface @ interface-map 2! ! ( )
current-interface @ interface-offset @ dup ,
( 0<> ) if
do-interface-method
else
do-class-method
then ;
: selector ( "name" -- )
\ define a method selector for later overriding in subclasses
['] no-method method ;
: interface-override! ( xt sel-xt interface-map -- )
\ xt is the new method for the selector sel-xt in interface-map
swap >body ( xt map selector-body )
selector-offset @ + ! ;
: class->map ( class -- map )
\ compute the (object-)map for the class
dup interface-map 2@ drop swap interface-map-offset @ + ;
: unique-interface-map ( class-map offset -- )
\ if the interface at offset in class map is the same as its parent,
\ copy it to make it unique; used for implementing a copy-on-write policy
over @ class-parent @ class->map ( class-map offset parent-map )
over + @ >r \ the map for the interface for the parent
+ dup @ ( mapp map )
dup r> =
if
@ interface-map 2@ save-mem drop
swap !
else
2drop
then ;
: class-override! ( xt sel-xt class-map -- )
\ xt is the new method for the selector sel-xt in class-map
over >body ( xt sel-xt class-map selector-body )
selector-interface @ ( xt sel-xt class-map offset )
?dup-if \ the selector is for an interface
2dup unique-interface-map
+ @
then
interface-override! ;
: overrides ( xt "selector" -- )
\ replace default method "method" in the current class with xt
\ must not be used during an interface definition
' current-interface @ class->map class-override! ;
\ interfaces
\ every interface gets a different offset; the latest one is stored here
variable last-interface-offset 0 last-interface-offset !
: interface ( -- )
interface-struct struct-allot >r
0 0 r@ interface-map 2!
-1 cells last-interface-offset +!
last-interface-offset @ r@ interface-offset !
0 r@ interface-map-offset !
r> current-interface ! ;
: end-interface-noname ( -- interface )
current-interface @ ;
: end-interface ( "name" -- )
\ name execution: ( -- interface )
end-interface-noname constant ;
\ classes
: add-class-order ( n1 class -- wid1 ... widn n+n1 )
dup >r class-parent @
?dup-if
recurse \ first add the search order for the parent class
then
r> class-wordlist @ swap 1+ ;
: push-order ( class -- )
\ add the class's wordlist to the search-order (in front)
>r get-order r> add-class-order set-order ;
: class ( parent-class -- size align )
class-struct struct-allot >r
dup interface-map 2@ save-mem r@ interface-map 2!
dup interface-map-offset @ r@ interface-map-offset !
r@ dup class->map !
0 r@ interface-offset !
dup r@ class-parent !
wordlist r@ class-wordlist !
r@ current-interface !
r> push-order
class-inst-size 2@ ;
: remove-class-order ( wid1 ... widn n+n1 class -- n1 )
\ note: no checks, whether the wordlists are correct
begin
>r nip 1-
r> class-parent @ dup 0=
until
drop ;
: drop-order ( class -- )
\ note: no checks, whether the wordlists are correct
>r get-order r> remove-class-order set-order ;
: end-class-noname ( size align -- class )
current-interface @ dup drop-order class-inst-size 2!
end-interface-noname ;
: end-class ( size align "name" -- )
\ name execution: ( -- class )
end-class-noname constant ;
\ visibility control
variable public-wordlist
: private ( -- )
current-interface @ class-wordlist @
dup get-current <>
if \ we are not private already
get-current public-wordlist !
then
set-current ;
: public ( -- )
public-wordlist @ set-current ;
\ classes that implement interfaces
: front-extend-mem ( addr1 u1 u -- addr addr2 u2 )
\ extend memory block allocated from the heap by u aus, with the
\ old stuff coming at the end
2dup + dup >r allocate throw ( addr1 u1 u addr2 ; R: u2 )
dup >r + >r over r> rot move ( addr1 ; R: u2 addr2 )
free throw
r> dup r> ;
: implementation ( interface -- )
dup interface-offset @ ( interface offset )
current-interface @ interface-map-offset @ negate over - dup 0>
if \ the interface does not fit in the present class-map
>r current-interface @ interface-map 2@
r@ front-extend-mem
current-interface @ interface-map 2!
r@ erase
dup negate current-interface @ interface-map-offset !
r>
then ( interface offset n )
drop >r
interface-map 2@ save-mem drop ( map )
current-interface @ dup interface-map 2@ drop
swap interface-map-offset @ + r> + ! ;
\ this/self, instance variables etc.
\ rename "this" into "self" if you are a Smalltalk fiend
0 value this ( -- object )
: to-this ( object -- )
TO this ;
\ another implementation, if you don't have (fast) values
\ variable thisp
\ : this ( -- object )
\ thisp @ ;
\ : to-this ( object -- )
\ thisp ! ;
: m: ( -- xt colon-sys ) ( run-time: object -- )
:noname
POSTPONE this
POSTPONE >r
POSTPONE to-this ;
: ;m ( colon-sys -- ) ( run-time: -- )
POSTPONE r>
POSTPONE to-this
POSTPONE ; ; immediate
: catch ( ... xt -- ... n )
\ make it safe to call CATCH within a method.
\ should also be done with all words containing CATCH.
this >r catch r> to-this ;
\ the following is a bit roundabout; this is caused by the standard
\ disallowing to change the compilation wordlist between CREATE and
\ DOES> (see RFI 3)
: inst-something ( size1 align1 size align xt "name" -- size2 align2 )
\ xt ( -- ) typically is for a DOES>-word
get-current >r
current-interface @ class-wordlist @ set-current
>r create-field r> execute
r> set-current ;
: do-inst-var ( -- )
does> \ name execution: ( -- addr )
( addr1 ) @ this + ;
: inst-var ( size1 align1 size align "name" -- size2 align2 )
\ name execution: ( -- addr )
['] do-inst-var inst-something ;
: do-inst-value ( -- )
does> \ name execution: ( -- w )
( addr1 ) @ this + @ ;
: inst-value ( size1 align1 "name" -- size2 align2 )
\ name execution: ( -- w )
\ a cell-sized value-flavoured instance field
1 cells: ['] do-inst-value inst-something ;
: <to-inst> ( w xt -- )
>body @ this + ! ;
: to-inst ( w "name" -- )
' <to-inst> ;
: [to-inst] ( compile-time: "name" -- ; run-time: w -- )
' >body @ POSTPONE literal
POSTPONE this
POSTPONE +
POSTPONE ! ; immediate
\ early binding stuff
\ this is not generally used, only where you want to do something like
\ superclass method invocation (so that you don't have to name your methods)
: <bind> ( class selector-xt -- xt )
>body swap class->map over selector-interface @
?dup-if
+ @
then
swap selector-offset @ + @ ;
: bind' ( "class" "selector" -- xt )
' execute ' <bind> ;
: bind ( ... object "class" "selector" -- ... )
bind' execute ;
: [bind] ( compile-time: "class" "selector" -- ; run-time: ... object -- ... )
bind' compile, ; immediate
: [super] ( compile-time: "selector" -- ; run-time: ... object -- ... )
\ same as `[bind] "parent" "selector"', where "parent" is the
\ parent class of the current class
current-interface @ class-parent @ ' <bind> compile, ; immediate
\ the object class
\ because OBJECT has no parent class, we have to build it by hand
\ (instead of with class)
wordlist
here current-interface !
current-interface 1 cells save-mem 2, \ map now contains a pointer to class
0 ,
0 ,
0 , \ parent
, \ wordlist
object-struct 2, \ instance size
object-struct
:noname ( object -- )
drop ;
method construct ( ... object -- )
:noname ( object -- )
." object:" dup . ." class:" object-map @ @ . ;
method print
end-class object
\ constructing objects
: init-object ( ... class object -- )
swap class->map over object-map ! ( ... object )
construct ;
: xt-new ( ... class xt -- object )
\ makes a new object, using XT ( size align -- addr ) to allocate memory
over class-inst-size 2@ rot execute
dup >r init-object r> ;
: dict-new ( ... class -- object )
\ makes a new object HERE in dictionary
['] struct-allot xt-new ;
: heap-new ( ... class -- object )
\ makes a new object in ALLOCATEd memory
['] struct-alloc xt-new ;
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