> WRT clean closures, check what I did in Cuis to serialize >> SortedCollections. See implementors and senders of #isClean. >> >> >> Nice. Thanks Juan. I was checking your code, and that's exactly why I >> asked Eliot. In your method you say: >> >> isClean >> "A clean closure is one that doesn't really need the home context >> because: >> - It doesn't send messages to self or super >> - It doesn't access any instance variable >> - It doesn't access any outer temp >> - It doesn't do ^ return" >> ..... >> >> So... my question is, WHAT do I need to serialize if I want to be able to >> serialize also "non clean". I mean, for each item on that list, what do I >> need apart from the closure instance and the receiver and method from the >> outerContext ? the whole stack of contexts ? >> >> > I think it is needed to know why you need to serialize a non-clean > closure. If it is just to be able to evaluate it,
well, some people may just need that, but there are cases where I need it completely. I mean, I need to serialize the whole possible graph of objects. This is an example for what I am doing in my PhD. We are also experiment with remote messages and things like that and sometimes we pass a whole stack. In that case I thin it also make sense. But again, these are particular cases. I agree that most of the times the closure will be "clean" > maybe you don't need the stack at all. My trick could be augmented by > serializing any referenced objects, but not the stack. > > Yes, maybe I was not clear. When I refer to "stack" I refer all instances of ContextPart (well, subclasses) and all the objects reachable from there. > Cheers, > Juan Vuletich > > > >> Thanks a lot in advance! >> >> >> >> -- >> Mariano >> http://marianopeck.wordpress.**com <http://marianopeck.wordpress.com> >> > > > -- Mariano http://marianopeck.wordpress.com
