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Issue MACRO-FUNCTION-ENVIRONMENT Writeup

Issue:         MACRO-FUNCTION-ENVIRONMENT

References: MACRO-FUNCTION, p. 144

MACROLET, pp. 113-4

&ENVIRONMENT, pp. 145-6

MACROEXPAND and MACROEXPAND-1, pp. 151-2

Category: ADDITION

Edit history: Version 1, Pavel, March 21, 1988

Version 2, Masinter, 8-Jun-88, (as per cleanup discussion)

Problem description:

The &ENVIRONMENT argument to a macro-expansion function may only be used as

the

second argument to the functions MACROEXPAND and MACROEXPAND-1. It is

sometimes

more convenient, however, to be able to work directly with the more

primitive

function MACRO-FUNCTION, on which MACROEXPAND and MACROEXPAND-1 are

presumably

based. However, since MACRO-FUNCTION does not take an environment

argument, it

cannot be used in situations in which that environment must be taken into

account.

Proposal (MACRO-FUNCTION-ENVIRONMENT:YES):

Add an optional second argument to MACRO-FUNCTION, that argument being an

environment that was passed as the &ENVIRONMENT argument to some macro

expansion

function. If the argument is not given, or the argument is NIL, the null

environment is used. MACRO-FUNCTION will now consider macro definitions

from

that environment in preference to ones in the global environment. It is an

error

to supply the environment argument in a use of MACRO-FUNCTION as a SETF

location

specifier.

Examples:

(macrolet ((foo (&environment env)

(if (macro-function 'bar env)

''yes

''no)))

(list (foo)

(macrolet ((bar () :beep))

(foo))))

=> (no yes)

(setf (macro-function 'bar env) ...) is an error.

Rationale:

Intuitively, the more primitive operation in macro expansion is

MACRO-FUNCTION,

not MACROEXPAND or MACROEXPAND-1, yet the environment argument can only be

supplied to the latter functions and not to the former one. By changing

this

state of affairs, the model of macro expansion becomes somewhat simpler.

Also,

more flexible use of the facility is enabled.

Current practice:

Xerox Common Lisp already implements this proposal. Symbolics Common Lisp,

and Kyoto Common Lisp do not. Lucid Common Lisp did not, but version 3.0

does.

Cost to Implementors:

This is presumably a simple change to make, a small matter of moving the

environment-searching code from MACROEXPAND-1 to MACRO-FUNCTION.

Cost to Users:

The change is upward-compatible and so poses no cost to users.

Cost of non-adoption:

One more (small) semantic wart on the language.

Benefits:

The function that users think of as being more primitive really is.

Aesthetics:

This slightly cleans up the language.

Discussion:

This issue was discussed starting in January 1987, but got tangled in

a web of other related proposals. In its current form, the only objections

have been that some other proposal or committee might otherwise change

macro handling, or that this proposal doesn't fix enough of the problems.


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