Updated 2017-09-19 00:24:14 by SEH

Richard Suchenwirth 2001-03-01:

LISP (for LISt Processing) is one of the oldest computer languages, dating back to c. 1956, but still having a following (all of Emacs is configured in a LISP dialect) and evolution.

Though I like to play with other languages in Tcl, I never really bothered to "play LISP" (but now see Playing LISP). Is it because LISP and Tcl are at least superficially so similar that there is little to give or take? Both languages treat program code like data, and build strongly on lists (dynamic in length and types) as major data structure. In LISP as in Tcl, a command is a list where the first element ("CAR") is the command name and the others are its arguments. LISP's "property lists" are a mapping from strings to lists, or what Tcl'ers know as an array.

So "playing LISP" would start with just some vocabulary exercises:
proc car L {lindex $L 0}     ;# "catch address register"
proc cdr L {lrange $L 1 end} ;# "catch data register"

LISP is more consequent in enclosing each and every list in parens, so you'll see much more of those in any LISP code. By adding the commonsense \n and even semicolon as command delimiters, Tcl can do with much less enclosing. Compare LISP's
(progn
    (do this)
    (do that))

to Tcl's
{
    do $this
    do $that
}

But Tcl lists are not exactly as powerful as LISP's, since they are "just" flat sequences, not made up of cons cells (something like pairs of pointers) - so in LISP you can have mutable list parts, circular lists... Didn't miss that yet, however.

KBK 2000-02-27:

Oh, but of course you can have mutable lists. Take a look at the following code. (Of course, for it to not leak memory, we need anonymous lambdas that are garbage-collected. Feather?)
# Create a word to represent an anonymous lambda

namespace eval ::cell {}

proc fwcons {} {
    variable cell
    if {[info exists cell]} {
        incr cell
    } else {
        set cell 1
    }
    return ::cell::$cell
}

# LAMBDA - Create an anonymous function

proc lambda {args body} {
    set p [fwcons]
    proc $p $args $body
    return $p
}

# CONS - Return a pair consisting of x and y.  Implemented as an anonymous
#        function

proc cons {x y} {
    lambda a [list if {$a} [list return $x] [list return $y]]
}

JCW Isn't the above an implementation of "COND", not "CONS"?

RS: it creates an anonymous proc that returns either CAR or CDR, so the "cons cell" is implemented as proc body, and returns the generated (lambda) name. But see Modeling COND with expr
# CAR/CDR - Dissect a pair by calling the anonymous function returned by CONS

proc car x {$x 1}
proc cdr x {$x 0}

# NIL - The null list

proc nil a {return nil}

# NULL - Test if a list is empty

proc null l {string equal nil $l}

# MAP - Apply a function to each member of a list

proc map {f l} {
    if {![null $l]} {
        $f [car $l]
        map $f [cdr $l]
    }
}

# PRIN1 - Print a thing with no newline

proc prin1 thing {
    puts -nonewline $thing
    puts -nonewline { }
}

# PRINTLIST - Print each element of a list

proc printlist l {
    map prin1 $l
    puts {}
}

# RPLACA - Replace the CAR of a list

proc rplaca {l x} {
    proc $l [info args $l] [lreplace [info body $l] 2 2 [list return $x]]
    return $l
}

# RPLACD - Replace the CDR of a list

proc rplacd {l y} {
    proc $l [info args $l] [lreplace [info body $l] 3 3 [list return $y]]
    return $l
}

set list [cons a [cons b [cons c nil]]]
prin1 {Before:}
printlist $list

rplaca $list d
rplacd [cdr [cdr $list]] [cons a nil]
prin1 {After:}
printlist $list

Stephen Trier: And here is a garbage collector.
# gc: Garbage collection for lambda functions.
#
# Makes the following simplistic assumptions:
#  1. All references to anonymous functions are on the stack or in
#     the root namespace.
#  2. Any reference to an anonymous function's automatically-assigned
#     proc name is in a proper Tcl list.
#
# Assumption 2 puts some restrictions on whether the name can be
# concatenated with other stuff in a string, as when making a
# multi-dimensional array index or dynamically constructing a proc
# body.
#
# Whatever you do with the name you get from lambda, the result has
# to look like a list or the reference will be missed by the garbage
# collector.
#
# The namespace limitation won't be hard to fix.
#
# BUGS:
#
#   Doesn't look for anonymous functions in Tk bindings
#
#   Doesn't look for anonymous functions in interp aliases.
#
#   Doesn't check the names of procs on the stack.
#
#   Deeply nested structures will cause the GC to exceed the
#   Tcl recursion limit.
#

proc safellength s {
    if {[catch {set l [llength $s]}]} {
        return 1
    } else {
        return $l
    }
}

proc findrefs x {
    upvar used used
    if {[safellength $x] > 1} {
        foreach item $x {
            findrefs $item
        }
    } elseif {[string match ::cell::* $x]} {
        findcellrefs $x
    }
}

proc findcellrefs {cell} {
    upvar used used
    if {[info exists used($cell)]} {
        if {$used($cell)} {
            return
        }
    }

    set used($cell) 1
    if {[info procs $cell] eq $cell} {
        findrefs [info body $cell]
        findrefs [info args $cell]
    }
}

proc gc {} {
    foreach cell [info procs ::cell::*] {
        set used($cell) 0
    }

    foreach var [info globals] {
        findrefs $var
        if {[array exists ::$var]} {
            findrefs [array get ::$var]
        } else {
            findrefs [set ::$var]
        }
    }

    for {set i [info level]} {$i > 0} {incr i -1} {
        foreach var [uplevel $i info locals] {
            findrefs $var
            if {[uplevel $i array exists $var]} {
                findrefs [uplevel $i array get $var]
            } else {
                findrefs [uplevel $i set $var]
            }
        }
    }

    foreach p [info procs] {
        if {![string match ::cell::* $p]} {
            findrefs [info args $p]
            findrefs [info body $p]
        }
    }

    foreach {cell flag} [array get used] {
        if {!$flag} {
            rename $cell {}
        }
    }
}

#
# Tests for the garbage collector
#

package require tcltest

gc  ;# Need to start tests with a garbage-free workspace.

::tcltest::test gc-1.1 {garbage collecting global variables} {
    set before [llength [info procs ::cell::*]]

    set x [lambda a a]
    set y(2) [lambda b b]
    gc
    set n1 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
    unset x
    gc
    set n2 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
    unset y
    gc
    set n3 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
    list $n1 $n2 $n3
} {2 1 0}

::tcltest::test gc-1.2 {garbage collecting procs} {
    set before [llength [info procs ::cell::*]]

    proc foo {} [lambda b {puts hi}]
    gc
    set n1 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
    rename foo {}
    gc
    set n2 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
    list $n1 $n2
} {1 0}

::tcltest::test gc-1.3 {garbage collecting procs} {
    proc bar {} {
        set before [llength [info procs ::cell::*]]
        lambda a {}
        set local [lambda b {}]
        set n0 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
        gc
        set n1 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
        unset local
        gc
        set n2 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
        return [list $n0 $n1 $n2]
    }
    bar
} {2 1 0}

::tcltest::test gc-1.4 {garbage collecting nested lambdas} {
    set before [llength [info procs ::cell::*]]

    set root [lambda a {}]
    set higher [lambda b [lambda c [lambda d $root]]]
    set n1 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
    gc
    set n2 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
    unset higher
    gc
    set n3 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
    unset root
    gc
    set n4 [expr [llength [info procs ::cell::*]] - $before]
    list $n1 $n2 $n3 $n4
} {4 4 1 0}

Arjen Markus: I have written a small script that takes a totally different approach to the issue: Garbage collection (When I originally added a question mark, the link was not created properly. Alas, the name now pretends more than the contents really is :-). Still, I think it is enjoyable a technique.

[Doug Alcorn]: Besides lambda functions and garbage collection issues, what about unwind-protect and macros? Those are two of the coolest features of lisp I miss. unwind-protect evaluates a protected-form and guarantees that a cleanup-forms are executed before unwind-protect exits, whether it terminates normally or is aborted by a control transfer of some kind. unwind-protect is intended to be used to make sure that certain side effects take place after the evaluation of protected-form. This is a really safe way to do clean-up code.

KBK recommends looking at try ... finally ... for how to do (unwind-protect).

Macros are "functions" that return functions. You pass in a set of variables, the "body" of the macro is the code you want to return with these substitued.

Arjen Markus: Macros are easy to simulate: use [interp alias] to hide the parameters you want substituted. Like:
proc printIt {text} {
    puts $text
}

interp alias {} print {} printIt "Hello world"

print
#-> Hello world

The new procedure "print" has no arguments (printIt takes "text" from the list provided by the alias) and is effectively the same as printIt with $text replaced. DKF: If you're generating Tcl code, you get to use list a lot. With it (plus interp alias and apply terms) you can construct pretty complex commands in a correct way without much trouble at all. The major missing feature (in Tcl relative to Lisp) is indeed the circular structure; this is a consequence of Tcl being a language that imposes strictly the requirement that all values must be representable as finite strings and that values are in principle immutable (you can mutate variables and command definitions). Thus, when you attempt to mutate a value to create a circular reference, you are in fact mutating a copy (or strictly, creating a new value based on the observed value). Note also that Tcl does not give values any kind of identity at the semantic level: any ‘abc’ is exactly the same as any other ‘abc’.

Under the hood... well, there the similarities with Lisp are closer but Tcl still enforces the “change it in one place, can't see the change in another” rule by copying values on write (if they're shared). Also, Tcl's values are larger than cons cells and capable of holding multiple types at once (which is really just an optimization strategy).

See Also  edit

Playing Lisp again
a cons/car/cdr implementation with macros
Lispy
a syntax parser
Block-local variables
how to model Lisp's LET construct
Backquoting
selective substitution in a quoted list
Modeling COND with expr
How do I read and write files in Tcl
with-open-file
Mal
(make a lisp) is a Clojure-inspired Lisp interpreter, designed to be a learning tool. Mal is implemented in 69 languages, including Tcl.