Hi Will,
thanks for you long explanation!
On Fri, May 9, 2014 at 7:59 PM, Rick Lyman lyman.r...@gmail.com wrote:
flow.c:60:37: error: fields must have a constant size: 'variable length
array in
structure' extension will never be supported
struct {any sym; any val;}
On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 08:06:57AM +0200, Alexander Burger wrote:
The problem with this is that is horribly inefficient. The dynamic version
myStruct bnd[length(x)];
simply decrements the stack pointer by length(x) * sizeof(myStruct)
(which is a single machine instruction!), while the
And this is an excellent example of PicoLisp going the extra mile. Instead of
handling C as the lowest abstraction, going to the actual machine. I imagine
other interpreted languages could be faster if designed with this attention to
detail.
On 12 maj 2014 08:24:13 CEST, Alexander Burger
And this is an excellent example of PicoLisp going the extra mile. Instead
of handling C as the lowest abstraction, going to the actual machine. I
imagine other interpreted languages could be faster if designed with this
attention to detail.
Exactly!
Thank you Alex, for the insightful
On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 8:06 AM, Alexander Burger a...@software-lab.de wrote:
Hi Will,
thanks for you long explanation!
Right, and thanks to all for this interesting journey in the internals.
The problem with this is that is horribly inefficient.
I'm interested by a clang compatible version,
Hi Christophe,
I'm interested by a clang compatible version, just to see what
emscripten will make of it.
For the sake of the experience I'm gonna try anyway.
Nice!
Probably much more interesting (and useful) would be to port the pil64
assembler to clang. I considered that initially, but
On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 5:40 AM, Christophe Gragnic
christophegrag...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm interested by a clang compatible version, just to see what
emscripten will make of it.
For the sake of the experience I'm gonna try anyway.
chri,
I'm also interested in a emscripten compiled
Hi Joe,
struct {any sym; any val;} bnd[100];
...
It builds and runs. I don't see any obvious consequences yet. I would have
assumed something like this would fail:
(setq Z (make (for N 120 (link N
This doesn't actually use any variable length array. You may instead try
(be sure to set
Hi Alex,
Thanks for the reply and the details.
On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 9:56 AM, Alexander Burger a...@software-lab.dewrote:
Alex, is there a reasonably safe upper bounds that can be used instead of
it being determined dynamically?
Hmm, what is safe? In any case you use the generality of
On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 2:16 PM, Joe Bogner joebog...@gmail.com wrote:
I was able to compile miniPicoLisp on windows under clang. I basically just
replaced all instances of variable array initialization, such as:
struct {any sym; any val;} bnd[length(x = car(expr))+3];
with
//TODO
struct
I added my changes to this repo:
https://github.com/joebo/miniPicoLisp
This commit has everything needed to build on clang on windows:
https://github.com/joebo/miniPicoLisp/commit/e34b052bc9c8bd8fa813833294a5830a69ffb56e
I'm using:
C:\Users\jbogner\Downloads\miniPicoLisp\srcclang -v
clang
On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 11:50 AM, Christophe Gragnic
christophegrag...@gmail.com wrote:
I just set up a repository on github (Alex being OK) and reported my issue
here:
https://github.com/Grahack/minipicolisp/issues/1
I think the main difference is your Makefile
Why not alloca()?
El 12 May 2014, a las 16:31, Joe Bogner joebog...@gmail.com escribió:
The proper solution is likely to use malloc/fre
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Ah, I read too quickly, didn't notice/realize the length(...)
subexpression was the variable part.
If you don't have alloca, and you don't want to use assembler, and you
don't want the overhead of malloc/free, and you don't want to, or literally
can't, risk demons flying out of your nose:
On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 7:03 PM, Joe Bogner joebog...@gmail.com wrote:
I think the main difference is your Makefile
Instead of:
clang $*.c
I'm doing this:
$(CC) -w -c $*.c
The -w suppresses warnings
Great. It works now. I fixed the warnings and didn't add the -w flag though
Hi Will,
If you don't have alloca, and you don't want to use assembler, and you
don't want the overhead of malloc/free, and you don't want to, or literally
can't, risk demons flying out of your nose:
typedef char byte;
byte hack[HACK_SIZE]; // hack is meant to remind one of stack
byte *
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