api-utility.texi 29 KB

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  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, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
  4. @c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  5. @c See the file guile.texi for copying conditions.
  6. @node Utility Functions
  7. @section General Utility Functions
  8. @c FIXME::martin: Review me!
  9. This chapter contains information about procedures which are not cleanly
  10. tied to a specific data type. Because of their wide range of
  11. applications, they are collected in a @dfn{utility} chapter.
  12. @menu
  13. * Equality:: When are two values `the same'?
  14. * Object Properties:: A modern interface to object properties.
  15. * Sorting:: Sort utility procedures.
  16. * Copying:: Copying deep structures.
  17. * General Conversion:: Converting objects to strings.
  18. * Hooks:: User-customizable event lists.
  19. @end menu
  20. @node Equality
  21. @subsection Equality
  22. @cindex sameness
  23. @cindex equality
  24. There are three kinds of core equality predicates in Scheme, described
  25. below. The same kinds of comparisons arise in other functions, like
  26. @code{memq} and friends (@pxref{List Searching}).
  27. For all three tests, objects of different types are never equal. So
  28. for instance a list and a vector are not @code{equal?}, even if their
  29. contents are the same. Exact and inexact numbers are considered
  30. different types too, and are hence not equal even if their values are
  31. the same.
  32. @code{eq?} tests just for the same object (essentially a pointer
  33. comparison). This is fast, and can be used when searching for a
  34. particular object, or when working with symbols or keywords (which are
  35. always unique objects).
  36. @code{eqv?} extends @code{eq?} to look at the value of numbers and
  37. characters. It can for instance be used somewhat like @code{=}
  38. (@pxref{Comparison}) but without an error if one operand isn't a
  39. number.
  40. @code{equal?} goes further, it looks (recursively) into the contents
  41. of lists, vectors, etc. This is good for instance on lists that have
  42. been read or calculated in various places and are the same, just not
  43. made up of the same pairs. Such lists look the same (when printed),
  44. and @code{equal?} will consider them the same.
  45. @sp 1
  46. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} eq? x y
  47. @deffnx {C Function} scm_eq_p (x, y)
  48. @rnindex eq?
  49. Return @code{#t} if @var{x} and @var{y} are the same object, except
  50. for numbers and characters. For example,
  51. @example
  52. (define x (vector 1 2 3))
  53. (define y (vector 1 2 3))
  54. (eq? x x) @result{} #t
  55. (eq? x y) @result{} #f
  56. @end example
  57. Numbers and characters are not equal to any other object, but the
  58. problem is they're not necessarily @code{eq?} to themselves either.
  59. This is even so when the number comes directly from a variable,
  60. @example
  61. (let ((n (+ 2 3)))
  62. (eq? n n)) @result{} *unspecified*
  63. @end example
  64. Generally @code{eqv?} below should be used when comparing numbers or
  65. characters. @code{=} (@pxref{Comparison}) or @code{char=?}
  66. (@pxref{Characters}) can be used too.
  67. It's worth noting that end-of-list @code{()}, @code{#t}, @code{#f}, a
  68. symbol of a given name, and a keyword of a given name, are unique
  69. objects. There's just one of each, so for instance no matter how
  70. @code{()} arises in a program, it's the same object and can be
  71. compared with @code{eq?},
  72. @example
  73. (define x (cdr '(123)))
  74. (define y (cdr '(456)))
  75. (eq? x y) @result{} #t
  76. (define x (string->symbol "foo"))
  77. (eq? x 'foo) @result{} #t
  78. @end example
  79. @end deffn
  80. @deftypefn {C Function} int scm_is_eq (SCM x, SCM y)
  81. Return @code{1} when @var{x} and @var{y} are equal in the sense of
  82. @code{eq?}, otherwise return @code{0}.
  83. @findex ==
  84. The @code{==} operator should not be used on @code{SCM} values, an
  85. @code{SCM} is a C type which cannot necessarily be compared using
  86. @code{==} (@pxref{The SCM Type}).
  87. @end deftypefn
  88. @sp 1
  89. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} eqv? x y
  90. @deffnx {C Function} scm_eqv_p (x, y)
  91. @rnindex eqv?
  92. Return @code{#t} if @var{x} and @var{y} are the same object, or for
  93. characters and numbers the same value.
  94. On objects except characters and numbers, @code{eqv?} is the same as
  95. @code{eq?} above, it's true if @var{x} and @var{y} are the same
  96. object.
  97. If @var{x} and @var{y} are numbers or characters, @code{eqv?} compares
  98. their type and value. An exact number is not @code{eqv?} to an
  99. inexact number (even if their value is the same).
  100. @example
  101. (eqv? 3 (+ 1 2)) @result{} #t
  102. (eqv? 1 1.0) @result{} #f
  103. @end example
  104. @end deffn
  105. @sp 1
  106. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} equal? x y
  107. @deffnx {C Function} scm_equal_p (x, y)
  108. @rnindex equal?
  109. Return @code{#t} if @var{x} and @var{y} are the same type, and their
  110. contents or value are equal.
  111. For a pair, string, vector, array or structure, @code{equal?} compares the
  112. contents, and does so using the same @code{equal?} recursively,
  113. so a deep structure can be traversed.
  114. @example
  115. (equal? (list 1 2 3) (list 1 2 3)) @result{} #t
  116. (equal? (list 1 2 3) (vector 1 2 3)) @result{} #f
  117. @end example
  118. For other objects, @code{equal?} compares as per @code{eqv?} above,
  119. which means characters and numbers are compared by type and value (and
  120. like @code{eqv?}, exact and inexact numbers are not @code{equal?},
  121. even if their value is the same).
  122. @example
  123. (equal? 3 (+ 1 2)) @result{} #t
  124. (equal? 1 1.0) @result{} #f
  125. @end example
  126. Hash tables are currently only compared as per @code{eq?}, so two
  127. different tables are not @code{equal?}, even if their contents are the
  128. same.
  129. @code{equal?} does not support circular data structures, it may go
  130. into an infinite loop if asked to compare two circular lists or
  131. similar.
  132. GOOPS object types (@pxref{GOOPS}), including foreign object types
  133. (@pxref{Defining New Foreign Object Types}), can have an @code{equal?}
  134. implementation specialized on two values of the same type. If
  135. @code{equal?} is called on two GOOPS objects of the same type,
  136. @code{equal?} will dispatch out to a generic function. This lets an
  137. application traverse the contents or control what is considered
  138. @code{equal?} for two objects of such a type. If there's no such
  139. handler, the default is to just compare as per @code{eq?}.
  140. @end deffn
  141. @node Object Properties
  142. @subsection Object Properties
  143. It's often useful to associate a piece of additional information with a
  144. Scheme object even though that object does not have a dedicated slot
  145. available in which the additional information could be stored. Object
  146. properties allow you to do just that.
  147. Guile's representation of an object property is a procedure-with-setter
  148. (@pxref{Procedures with Setters}) that can be used with the generalized
  149. form of @code{set!} (REFFIXME) to set and retrieve that property for any
  150. Scheme object. So, setting a property looks like this:
  151. @lisp
  152. (set! (my-property obj1) value-for-obj1)
  153. (set! (my-property obj2) value-for-obj2)
  154. @end lisp
  155. @noindent
  156. And retrieving values of the same property looks like this:
  157. @lisp
  158. (my-property obj1)
  159. @result{}
  160. value-for-obj1
  161. (my-property obj2)
  162. @result{}
  163. value-for-obj2
  164. @end lisp
  165. To create an object property in the first place, use the
  166. @code{make-object-property} procedure:
  167. @lisp
  168. (define my-property (make-object-property))
  169. @end lisp
  170. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-object-property
  171. Create and return an object property. An object property is a
  172. procedure-with-setter that can be called in two ways. @code{(set!
  173. (@var{property} @var{obj}) @var{val})} sets @var{obj}'s @var{property}
  174. to @var{val}. @code{(@var{property} @var{obj})} returns the current
  175. setting of @var{obj}'s @var{property}.
  176. @end deffn
  177. A single object property created by @code{make-object-property} can
  178. associate distinct property values with all Scheme values that are
  179. distinguishable by @code{eq?} (ruling out numeric values).
  180. Internally, object properties are implemented using a weak key hash
  181. table. This means that, as long as a Scheme value with property values
  182. is protected from garbage collection, its property values are also
  183. protected. When the Scheme value is collected, its entry in the
  184. property table is removed and so the (ex-) property values are no longer
  185. protected by the table.
  186. Guile also implements a more traditional Lispy interface to properties,
  187. in which each object has an list of key-value pairs associated with it.
  188. Properties in that list are keyed by symbols. This is a legacy
  189. interface; you should use weak hash tables or object properties instead.
  190. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} object-properties obj
  191. @deffnx {C Function} scm_object_properties (obj)
  192. Return @var{obj}'s property list.
  193. @end deffn
  194. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} set-object-properties! obj alist
  195. @deffnx {C Function} scm_set_object_properties_x (obj, alist)
  196. Set @var{obj}'s property list to @var{alist}.
  197. @end deffn
  198. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} object-property obj key
  199. @deffnx {C Function} scm_object_property (obj, key)
  200. Return the property of @var{obj} with name @var{key}.
  201. @end deffn
  202. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} set-object-property! obj key value
  203. @deffnx {C Function} scm_set_object_property_x (obj, key, value)
  204. In @var{obj}'s property list, set the property named @var{key}
  205. to @var{value}.
  206. @end deffn
  207. @node Sorting
  208. @subsection Sorting
  209. @c FIXME::martin: Review me!
  210. @cindex sorting
  211. @cindex sorting lists
  212. @cindex sorting vectors
  213. Sorting is very important in computer programs. Therefore, Guile comes
  214. with several sorting procedures built-in. As always, procedures with
  215. names ending in @code{!} are side-effecting, that means that they may
  216. modify their parameters in order to produce their results.
  217. The first group of procedures can be used to merge two lists (which must
  218. be already sorted on their own) and produce sorted lists containing
  219. all elements of the input lists.
  220. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} merge alist blist less
  221. @deffnx {C Function} scm_merge (alist, blist, less)
  222. Merge two already sorted lists into one.
  223. Given two lists @var{alist} and @var{blist}, such that
  224. @code{(sorted? alist less?)} and @code{(sorted? blist less?)},
  225. return a new list in which the elements of @var{alist} and
  226. @var{blist} have been stably interleaved so that
  227. @code{(sorted? (merge alist blist less?) less?)}.
  228. Note: this does _not_ accept vectors.
  229. @end deffn
  230. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} merge! alist blist less
  231. @deffnx {C Function} scm_merge_x (alist, blist, less)
  232. Takes two lists @var{alist} and @var{blist} such that
  233. @code{(sorted? alist less?)} and @code{(sorted? blist less?)} and
  234. returns a new list in which the elements of @var{alist} and
  235. @var{blist} have been stably interleaved so that
  236. @code{(sorted? (merge alist blist less?) less?)}.
  237. This is the destructive variant of @code{merge}
  238. Note: this does _not_ accept vectors.
  239. @end deffn
  240. The following procedures can operate on sequences which are either
  241. vectors or list. According to the given arguments, they return sorted
  242. vectors or lists, respectively. The first of the following procedures
  243. determines whether a sequence is already sorted, the other sort a given
  244. sequence. The variants with names starting with @code{stable-} are
  245. special in that they maintain a special property of the input sequences:
  246. If two or more elements are the same according to the comparison
  247. predicate, they are left in the same order as they appeared in the
  248. input.
  249. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sorted? items less
  250. @deffnx {C Function} scm_sorted_p (items, less)
  251. Return @code{#t} if @var{items} is a list or vector such that,
  252. for each element @var{x} and the next element @var{y} of
  253. @var{items}, @code{(@var{less} @var{y} @var{x})} returns
  254. @code{#f}. Otherwise return @code{#f}.
  255. @end deffn
  256. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sort items less
  257. @deffnx {C Function} scm_sort (items, less)
  258. Sort the sequence @var{items}, which may be a list or a
  259. vector. @var{less} is used for comparing the sequence
  260. elements. This is not a stable sort.
  261. @end deffn
  262. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sort! items less
  263. @deffnx {C Function} scm_sort_x (items, less)
  264. Sort the sequence @var{items}, which may be a list or a
  265. vector. @var{less} is used for comparing the sequence
  266. elements. The sorting is destructive, that means that the
  267. input sequence is modified to produce the sorted result.
  268. This is not a stable sort.
  269. @end deffn
  270. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stable-sort items less
  271. @deffnx {C Function} scm_stable_sort (items, less)
  272. Sort the sequence @var{items}, which may be a list or a
  273. vector. @var{less} is used for comparing the sequence elements.
  274. This is a stable sort.
  275. @end deffn
  276. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stable-sort! items less
  277. @deffnx {C Function} scm_stable_sort_x (items, less)
  278. Sort the sequence @var{items}, which may be a list or a
  279. vector. @var{less} is used for comparing the sequence elements.
  280. The sorting is destructive, that means that the input sequence
  281. is modified to produce the sorted result.
  282. This is a stable sort.
  283. @end deffn
  284. The procedures in the last group only accept lists or vectors as input,
  285. as their names indicate.
  286. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sort-list items less
  287. @deffnx {C Function} scm_sort_list (items, less)
  288. Sort the list @var{items}, using @var{less} for comparing the
  289. list elements. This is a stable sort.
  290. @end deffn
  291. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sort-list! items less
  292. @deffnx {C Function} scm_sort_list_x (items, less)
  293. Sort the list @var{items}, using @var{less} for comparing the
  294. list elements. The sorting is destructive, that means that the
  295. input list is modified to produce the sorted result.
  296. This is a stable sort.
  297. @end deffn
  298. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} restricted-vector-sort! vec less startpos endpos
  299. @deffnx {C Function} scm_restricted_vector_sort_x (vec, less, startpos, endpos)
  300. Sort the vector @var{vec}, using @var{less} for comparing
  301. the vector elements. @var{startpos} (inclusively) and
  302. @var{endpos} (exclusively) delimit
  303. the range of the vector which gets sorted. The return value
  304. is not specified.
  305. @end deffn
  306. @node Copying
  307. @subsection Copying Deep Structures
  308. @c FIXME::martin: Review me!
  309. The procedures for copying lists (@pxref{Lists}) only produce a flat
  310. copy of the input list, and currently Guile does not even contain
  311. procedures for copying vectors. @code{copy-tree} can be used for these
  312. application, as it does not only copy the spine of a list, but also
  313. copies any pairs in the cars of the input lists.
  314. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} copy-tree obj
  315. @deffnx {C Function} scm_copy_tree (obj)
  316. Recursively copy the data tree that is bound to @var{obj}, and return
  317. the new data structure. @code{copy-tree} recurses down the
  318. contents of both pairs and vectors (since both cons cells and vector
  319. cells may point to arbitrary objects), and stops recursing when it hits
  320. any other object.
  321. @end deffn
  322. @node General Conversion
  323. @subsection General String Conversion
  324. @c FIXME::martin: Review me!
  325. When debugging Scheme programs, but also for providing a human-friendly
  326. interface, a procedure for converting any Scheme object into string
  327. format is very useful. Conversion from/to strings can of course be done
  328. with specialized procedures when the data type of the object to convert
  329. is known, but with this procedure, it is often more comfortable.
  330. @code{object->string} converts an object by using a print procedure for
  331. writing to a string port, and then returning the resulting string.
  332. Converting an object back from the string is only possible if the object
  333. type has a read syntax and the read syntax is preserved by the printing
  334. procedure.
  335. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} object->string obj [printer]
  336. @deffnx {C Function} scm_object_to_string (obj, printer)
  337. Return a Scheme string obtained by printing @var{obj}.
  338. Printing function can be specified by the optional second
  339. argument @var{printer} (default: @code{write}).
  340. @end deffn
  341. @node Hooks
  342. @subsection Hooks
  343. @tpindex Hooks
  344. A hook is a list of procedures to be called at well defined points in
  345. time. Typically, an application provides a hook @var{h} and promises
  346. its users that it will call all of the procedures in @var{h} at a
  347. defined point in the application's processing. By adding its own
  348. procedure to @var{h}, an application user can tap into or even influence
  349. the progress of the application.
  350. Guile itself provides several such hooks for debugging and customization
  351. purposes: these are listed in a subsection below.
  352. When an application first creates a hook, it needs to know how many
  353. arguments will be passed to the hook's procedures when the hook is run.
  354. The chosen number of arguments (which may be none) is declared when the
  355. hook is created, and all the procedures that are added to that hook must
  356. be capable of accepting that number of arguments.
  357. A hook is created using @code{make-hook}. A procedure can be added to
  358. or removed from a hook using @code{add-hook!} or @code{remove-hook!},
  359. and all of a hook's procedures can be removed together using
  360. @code{reset-hook!}. When an application wants to run a hook, it does so
  361. using @code{run-hook}.
  362. @menu
  363. * Hook Example:: Hook usage by example.
  364. * Hook Reference:: Reference of all hook procedures.
  365. * C Hooks:: Hooks for use from C code.
  366. * GC Hooks:: Garbage collection hooks.
  367. * REPL Hooks:: Hooks into the Guile REPL.
  368. @end menu
  369. @node Hook Example
  370. @subsubsection Hook Usage by Example
  371. Hook usage is shown by some examples in this section. First, we will
  372. define a hook of arity 2 --- that is, the procedures stored in the hook
  373. will have to accept two arguments.
  374. @lisp
  375. (define hook (make-hook 2))
  376. hook
  377. @result{} #<hook 2 40286c90>
  378. @end lisp
  379. Now we are ready to add some procedures to the newly created hook with
  380. @code{add-hook!}. In the following example, two procedures are added,
  381. which print different messages and do different things with their
  382. arguments.
  383. @lisp
  384. (add-hook! hook (lambda (x y)
  385. (display "Foo: ")
  386. (display (+ x y))
  387. (newline)))
  388. (add-hook! hook (lambda (x y)
  389. (display "Bar: ")
  390. (display (* x y))
  391. (newline)))
  392. @end lisp
  393. Once the procedures have been added, we can invoke the hook using
  394. @code{run-hook}.
  395. @lisp
  396. (run-hook hook 3 4)
  397. @print{} Bar: 12
  398. @print{} Foo: 7
  399. @end lisp
  400. Note that the procedures are called in the reverse of the order with
  401. which they were added. This is because the default behaviour of
  402. @code{add-hook!} is to add its procedure to the @emph{front} of the
  403. hook's procedure list. You can force @code{add-hook!} to add its
  404. procedure to the @emph{end} of the list instead by providing a third
  405. @code{#t} argument on the second call to @code{add-hook!}.
  406. @lisp
  407. (add-hook! hook (lambda (x y)
  408. (display "Foo: ")
  409. (display (+ x y))
  410. (newline)))
  411. (add-hook! hook (lambda (x y)
  412. (display "Bar: ")
  413. (display (* x y))
  414. (newline))
  415. #t) ; @r{<- Change here!}
  416. (run-hook hook 3 4)
  417. @print{} Foo: 7
  418. @print{} Bar: 12
  419. @end lisp
  420. @node Hook Reference
  421. @subsubsection Hook Reference
  422. When you create a hook with @code{make-hook}, you must specify the arity
  423. of the procedures which can be added to the hook. If the arity is not
  424. given explicitly as an argument to @code{make-hook}, it defaults to
  425. zero. All procedures of a given hook must have the same arity, and when
  426. the procedures are invoked using @code{run-hook}, the number of
  427. arguments passed must match the arity specified at hook creation time.
  428. The order in which procedures are added to a hook matters. If the third
  429. parameter to @code{add-hook!} is omitted or is equal to @code{#f}, the
  430. procedure is added in front of the procedures which might already be on
  431. that hook, otherwise the procedure is added at the end. The procedures
  432. are always called from the front to the end of the list when they are
  433. invoked via @code{run-hook}.
  434. The ordering of the list of procedures returned by @code{hook->list}
  435. matches the order in which those procedures would be called if the hook
  436. was run using @code{run-hook}.
  437. Note that the C functions in the following entries are for handling
  438. @dfn{Scheme-level} hooks in C. There are also @dfn{C-level} hooks which
  439. have their own interface (@pxref{C Hooks}).
  440. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-hook [n_args]
  441. @deffnx {C Function} scm_make_hook (n_args)
  442. Create a hook for storing procedure of arity @var{n_args}.
  443. @var{n_args} defaults to zero. The returned value is a hook
  444. object to be used with the other hook procedures.
  445. @end deffn
  446. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} hook? x
  447. @deffnx {C Function} scm_hook_p (x)
  448. Return @code{#t} if @var{x} is a hook, @code{#f} otherwise.
  449. @end deffn
  450. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} hook-empty? hook
  451. @deffnx {C Function} scm_hook_empty_p (hook)
  452. Return @code{#t} if @var{hook} is an empty hook, @code{#f}
  453. otherwise.
  454. @end deffn
  455. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} add-hook! hook proc [append_p]
  456. @deffnx {C Function} scm_add_hook_x (hook, proc, append_p)
  457. Add the procedure @var{proc} to the hook @var{hook}. The
  458. procedure is added to the end if @var{append_p} is true,
  459. otherwise it is added to the front. The return value of this
  460. procedure is not specified.
  461. @end deffn
  462. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} remove-hook! hook proc
  463. @deffnx {C Function} scm_remove_hook_x (hook, proc)
  464. Remove the procedure @var{proc} from the hook @var{hook}. The
  465. return value of this procedure is not specified.
  466. @end deffn
  467. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} reset-hook! hook
  468. @deffnx {C Function} scm_reset_hook_x (hook)
  469. Remove all procedures from the hook @var{hook}. The return
  470. value of this procedure is not specified.
  471. @end deffn
  472. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} hook->list hook
  473. @deffnx {C Function} scm_hook_to_list (hook)
  474. Convert the procedure list of @var{hook} to a list.
  475. @end deffn
  476. @deffn {Scheme Procedure} run-hook hook arg @dots{}
  477. @deffnx {C Function} scm_run_hook (hook, args)
  478. Apply all procedures from the hook @var{hook} to the arguments @var{arg}
  479. @enddots{}. The order of the procedure application is first to last.
  480. The return value of this procedure is not specified.
  481. @end deffn
  482. If, in C code, you are certain that you have a hook object and well
  483. formed argument list for that hook, you can also use
  484. @code{scm_c_run_hook}, which is identical to @code{scm_run_hook} but
  485. does no type checking.
  486. @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_c_run_hook (SCM hook, SCM args)
  487. The same as @code{scm_run_hook} but without any type checking to confirm
  488. that @var{hook} is actually a hook object and that @var{args} is a
  489. well-formed list matching the arity of the hook.
  490. @end deftypefn
  491. For C code, @code{SCM_HOOKP} is a faster alternative to
  492. @code{scm_hook_p}:
  493. @deftypefn {C Macro} int SCM_HOOKP (x)
  494. Return 1 if @var{x} is a Scheme-level hook, 0 otherwise.
  495. @end deftypefn
  496. @subsubsection Handling Scheme-level hooks from C code
  497. Here is an example of how to handle Scheme-level hooks from C code using
  498. the above functions.
  499. @example
  500. if (scm_is_true (scm_hook_p (obj)))
  501. /* handle Scheme-level hook using C functions */
  502. scm_reset_hook_x (obj);
  503. else
  504. /* do something else (obj is not a hook) */
  505. @end example
  506. @node C Hooks
  507. @subsubsection Hooks For C Code.
  508. The hooks already described are intended to be populated by Scheme-level
  509. procedures. In addition to this, the Guile library provides an
  510. independent set of interfaces for the creation and manipulation of hooks
  511. that are designed to be populated by functions implemented in C.
  512. The original motivation here was to provide a kind of hook that could
  513. safely be invoked at various points during garbage collection.
  514. Scheme-level hooks are unsuitable for this purpose as running them could
  515. itself require memory allocation, which would then invoke garbage
  516. collection recursively @dots{} However, it is also the case that these
  517. hooks are easier to work with than the Scheme-level ones if you only
  518. want to register C functions with them. So if that is mainly what your
  519. code needs to do, you may prefer to use this interface.
  520. To create a C hook, you should allocate storage for a structure of type
  521. @code{scm_t_c_hook} and then initialize it using @code{scm_c_hook_init}.
  522. @deftp {C Type} scm_t_c_hook
  523. Data type for a C hook. The internals of this type should be treated as
  524. opaque.
  525. @end deftp
  526. @deftp {C Enum} scm_t_c_hook_type
  527. Enumeration of possible hook types, which are:
  528. @table @code
  529. @item SCM_C_HOOK_NORMAL
  530. @vindex SCM_C_HOOK_NORMAL
  531. Type of hook for which all the registered functions will always be called.
  532. @item SCM_C_HOOK_OR
  533. @vindex SCM_C_HOOK_OR
  534. Type of hook for which the sequence of registered functions will be
  535. called only until one of them returns C true (a non-NULL pointer).
  536. @item SCM_C_HOOK_AND
  537. @vindex SCM_C_HOOK_AND
  538. Type of hook for which the sequence of registered functions will be
  539. called only until one of them returns C false (a NULL pointer).
  540. @end table
  541. @end deftp
  542. @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_c_hook_init (scm_t_c_hook *hook, void *hook_data, scm_t_c_hook_type type)
  543. Initialize the C hook at memory pointed to by @var{hook}. @var{type}
  544. should be one of the values of the @code{scm_t_c_hook_type} enumeration,
  545. and controls how the hook functions will be called. @var{hook_data} is
  546. a closure parameter that will be passed to all registered hook functions
  547. when they are called.
  548. @end deftypefn
  549. To add or remove a C function from a C hook, use @code{scm_c_hook_add}
  550. or @code{scm_c_hook_remove}. A hook function must expect three
  551. @code{void *} parameters which are, respectively:
  552. @table @var
  553. @item hook_data
  554. The hook closure data that was specified at the time the hook was
  555. initialized by @code{scm_c_hook_init}.
  556. @item func_data
  557. The function closure data that was specified at the time that that
  558. function was registered with the hook by @code{scm_c_hook_add}.
  559. @item data
  560. The call closure data specified by the @code{scm_c_hook_run} call that
  561. runs the hook.
  562. @end table
  563. @deftp {C Type} scm_t_c_hook_function
  564. Function type for a C hook function: takes three @code{void *}
  565. parameters and returns a @code{void *} result.
  566. @end deftp
  567. @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_c_hook_add (scm_t_c_hook *hook, scm_t_c_hook_function func, void *func_data, int appendp)
  568. Add function @var{func}, with function closure data @var{func_data}, to
  569. the C hook @var{hook}. The new function is appended to the hook's list
  570. of functions if @var{appendp} is non-zero, otherwise prepended.
  571. @end deftypefn
  572. @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_c_hook_remove (scm_t_c_hook *hook, scm_t_c_hook_function func, void *func_data)
  573. Remove function @var{func}, with function closure data @var{func_data},
  574. from the C hook @var{hook}. @code{scm_c_hook_remove} checks both
  575. @var{func} and @var{func_data} so as to allow for the same @var{func}
  576. being registered multiple times with different closure data.
  577. @end deftypefn
  578. Finally, to invoke a C hook, call the @code{scm_c_hook_run} function
  579. specifying the hook and the call closure data for this run:
  580. @deftypefn {C Function} {void *} scm_c_hook_run (scm_t_c_hook *hook, void *data)
  581. Run the C hook @var{hook} will call closure data @var{data}. Subject to
  582. the variations for hook types @code{SCM_C_HOOK_OR} and
  583. @code{SCM_C_HOOK_AND}, @code{scm_c_hook_run} calls @var{hook}'s
  584. registered functions in turn, passing them the hook's closure data, each
  585. function's closure data, and the call closure data.
  586. @code{scm_c_hook_run}'s return value is the return value of the last
  587. function to be called.
  588. @end deftypefn
  589. @node GC Hooks
  590. @subsubsection Hooks for Garbage Collection
  591. Whenever Guile performs a garbage collection, it calls the following
  592. hooks in the order shown.
  593. @defvr {C Hook} scm_before_gc_c_hook
  594. C hook called at the very start of a garbage collection, after setting
  595. @code{scm_gc_running_p} to 1, but before entering the GC critical
  596. section.
  597. If garbage collection is blocked because @code{scm_block_gc} is
  598. non-zero, GC exits early soon after calling this hook, and no further
  599. hooks will be called.
  600. @end defvr
  601. @defvr {C Hook} scm_before_mark_c_hook
  602. C hook called before beginning the mark phase of garbage collection,
  603. after the GC thread has entered a critical section.
  604. @end defvr
  605. @defvr {C Hook} scm_before_sweep_c_hook
  606. C hook called before beginning the sweep phase of garbage collection.
  607. This is the same as at the end of the mark phase, since nothing else
  608. happens between marking and sweeping.
  609. @end defvr
  610. @defvr {C Hook} scm_after_sweep_c_hook
  611. C hook called after the end of the sweep phase of garbage collection,
  612. but while the GC thread is still inside its critical section.
  613. @end defvr
  614. @defvr {C Hook} scm_after_gc_c_hook
  615. C hook called at the very end of a garbage collection, after the GC
  616. thread has left its critical section.
  617. @end defvr
  618. @defvr {Scheme Hook} after-gc-hook
  619. @vindex scm_after_gc_hook
  620. Scheme hook with arity 0. This hook is run asynchronously
  621. (@pxref{Asyncs}) soon after the GC has completed and any other events
  622. that were deferred during garbage collection have been processed. (Also
  623. accessible from C with the name @code{scm_after_gc_hook}.)
  624. @end defvr
  625. All the C hooks listed here have type @code{SCM_C_HOOK_NORMAL}, are
  626. initialized with hook closure data NULL, are invoked by
  627. @code{scm_c_hook_run} with call closure data NULL.
  628. @cindex guardians, testing for GC'd objects
  629. The Scheme hook @code{after-gc-hook} is particularly useful in
  630. conjunction with guardians (@pxref{Guardians}). Typically, if you are
  631. using a guardian, you want to call the guardian after garbage collection
  632. to see if any of the objects added to the guardian have been collected.
  633. By adding a thunk that performs this call to @code{after-gc-hook}, you
  634. can ensure that your guardian is tested after every garbage collection
  635. cycle.
  636. @node REPL Hooks
  637. @subsubsection Hooks into the Guile REPL
  638. @c Local Variables:
  639. @c TeX-master: "guile.texi"
  640. @c End: