I am attached to clisp on windows for some unfathomable reason - for me it has been very robust (I use sbcl on linux)
However, I will stop reporting clisp related issues unless I convince myself that they are related to ansi-spec conformance and portability.
On Wed, Dec 25, 2013 at 8:14 PM, Liam Healy lhealy@common-lisp.net wrote:
My fix (as opposed to your fix) to the problem you reported in your previous email should not exhibit this problem, see my previous email. A better summary is CLISP is not a preferred platform for anything. There is a Windows port of SBCL, and has been for quite some time. A better cross-check on portability would be CCL.
Liam
On Fri, Jan 4, 2013 at 11:47 AM, Mirko Vukovic mirko.vukovic@gmail.comwrote:
This is a follow up on my posted fix to copy-to. For some reason this has triggered another error. I do not understand how that other error is triggered. The error and the fix are discussed at the bottom of the email
On Fri, Jan 4, 2013 at 10:39 AM, Mirko Vukovic mirko.vukovic@gmail.comwrote:
The following works in sbcl+grid:
(copy-to (make-array 2 :element-type 'double-float :initial-contents '(1.0d0 2.0d0)) 'grid:foreign-array)
But it does not work in clisp+grid.
The root cause lies in the function grid/array.lisp/element-type. It uses `(array-element-type grid)'.
But this can present a problem. Quoting hyperspec:
(Because of *array* http://26_glo_a.htm#array *upgrading*, this *type specifier* http://26_glo_t.htm#type_specifier can in some cases denote a *supertype* http://26_glo_s.htm#supertype of the *expressed array element type* http://26_glo_e.htm#expressed_array_element_typeof the *array*.)
In CLISP, array-element-type returns `T' when passed #(1d0 2d0)
It returns T even when passed a simple array:
(array-element-type (make-array 2 :element-type 'double-float :initial-contents '(1.0d0 2.0d0) :adjustable nil :fill-pointer nil :displaced-to nil) )
The proposed fix is
(defmethod element-type ((grid array)) (type-of (row-major-aref grid 0)) #+skip(array-element-type grid))
Now copy-to works in clisp as well.
Mirko
After finishing this, I recompiled afresh, and got another error that I
traced to make-grid-data and make-array
In clisp, make-array will return an array of NIL's even if the element-type is specified as double float. In SBCL make-array will return an array filled with 1d0.
I had to add some clisp specific code to make-grid-data in order for it to initialize properly.
First, a helper function: (defun default-element (element-type) "Return a default element depending on element-type " (let ((a-list '((double-float . 1d0) (symbol . T)))) (let ((match (cdr (assoc element-type a-list)))) (assert match () "Default element type undefined for element-type ~a" element-type) match)))
And second, a bit of set-up code in make-grid-data. I broke apart the (let* statement to provide an explicit initial element if it has not been specified already:
(defmethod make-grid-data ((type (eql 'array)) dimensions rest-spec &key (initial-element nil initial-element-p) (initial-contents nil initial-contents-p)) (let ((element-type (top-spec-type rest-spec))) #+clisp (unless (or initial-element-p initial-contents-p) (setf initial-element (default-element element-type) initial-element-p t)) (let ((array ... UNCHANGED
Summary: To fix to copy-to, I modified (defmethod element-type ((grid array)) For some unknown reason, that triggered an error in the array initialization routine. To fix that, I had to add code to make-grid-data, so that it fills double-float arrays with 0d0 instead of NIL's
I will continue using this code to see if there are additional problems.
BTW, I realize that CLISP is not a preferred platform for speedy computation, but that is what I use on Windows, until SBCL gets officially ported to it. And in addition, it is a nice cross-check on portability.
Mirko
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