On 12 Jul 2009, at 11:17, Robert Goldman wrote:
Greg Pfeil wrote:
On 9 Jul 2009, at 13:08, Robert Goldman wrote:
Greg Pfeil wrote:
Here are a couple changes to ASDF that I made in the process of creating an ASDF browser for CCL's IDE:
system-source-file now works for systems without their own .asd optional parts of systems (version, maintainer, etc.) don't leave their slots unbound
The first of these looks good, but I'm less fond of the second change. I've been bitten repeatedly by bugs caused by initforms that caused slots not explicitly set to have some value that hides a mistaken failure to fill the slot.
Yeah, I should have sent these as separate patches. The first one is more important, IMO, and the second is definitely debatable.
How about sending that first patch while we work through the second issue. Even if we add the initforms, seems like it's still worth discussing the tradeoff b/w "" and NIL as defaults. I'd be inclined to prefer the latter, even at the expense of :type (or null string), so that an unsupplied value is readily distinguishable from an empty value.
Here's the system-source-file patch.
The argument for slot-unbound is that it makes an error when you think you have set a slot, but you haven't. For example, let's say I misspell an initarg so that the value quietly vanishes. Then I'd rather the system hurl an error instead of quietly going off and doing something I don't expect.
I'd rather have us handle slot-unbound on those optional parts of the system instead of stuffing a bunch of NILs in there.
When you say "us", do you mean implementing the accessors explicitly in ASDF to handle the condition, or having the caller handle/avoid the condition?
The latter.
If one is expecting strings here one must still handle checking for NIL, so having to check for slot-boundp doesn't seem that much more onerous.
Checking slot-boundp has a number of problems:
you have to export the slot names
Is this really an issue? Would someone outside the ASDF package really be looking into these things? I suppose possibly so...
it breaks the accessor abstraction because the slot names don't match the accessor names (when (slot-boundp foo 'asdf::description) (system-description foo))
(handler-case .... (slot-unbound () ...)
avoids this problem, if you know that you want to quash unbound slots.
You know, I considered this, but quickly dismissed it as too verbose. However, while
(handler-case (system-description foo) (slot-unbound () ""))
is worse than the
(or (system-description foo) "")
that I wanted, it's still better than the
(when (slot-boundp foo 'asdf::description) (system-description foo))
I was afraid of. I'm happy to use that pattern.
I'd still prefer optional values to not signal slot-unbound, but I understand the tradeoff with catching errors in initforms, etc.