Okey thank you very much

2012/4/11 Sébastien Doeraene <sjrdoera...@gmail.com>

> Hi again,
>
> It's the latter that is true. The garbage collector can collect any
> variable that is not reachable anymore from any code (statement) that still
> has to be run. Hence, after %(A), the variable E(M) can indeed be
> collected. But that's assuming that garbage collection does run at this
> point, of course.
>
> Sébastien
>
>
> On Wed, Apr 11, 2012 at 20:22, Enrique Iurleo <quiquewol...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> Well a new doubt and i hope the last haha.. how exactly work the garbage
>> collector in OZ? i mean.. for collect a variable in the SAS look if there's
>> a environment on the stack that references the variable or look the code in
>> the stack that references the variable? i mean.. for example:
>>
>> local X R M P Q Y in
>>     M=proc{$ X Res}
>>             Res = proc{$ Y}
>>                           Y = X
>>                       end
>>          end
>>     {M X P}
>>     {M Y Q} <------------------- %(A)
>>     R = P
>>     X = 2
>>     {R X}
>>
>> after execute the point %(A) the garbage collector will collect the
>> variable E(M) in the SAS because the variable will not use late? or can
>> collect the variable beacause the environment of the other statements still
>> have the identifier M bound to E(M)?
>>
>> I mean.. the garbage collector look if the environments in the stack
>> still references the variable? or look if in the stack theres some
>> statements that uses or not the variable?
>>
>> Sorry if is hard to understand haha
>>
>
>
>
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