# Metalang99 [![CI](https://github.com/hirrolot/metalang99/workflows/C/C++%20CI/badge.svg)](https://github.com/hirrolot/metalang99/actions) [![docs](https://img.shields.io/badge/docs-readthedocs.io-blue)](https://metalang99.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) [![book](https://img.shields.io/badge/book-gitbook.io-pink)](https://hirrolot.gitbook.io/metalang99/) [![specification](https://img.shields.io/badge/specification-PDF-aa44d6)](https://github.com/hirrolot/metalang99/blob/master/spec/spec.pdf) > The dark side of the force is a pathway to many abilities, some considered to be unnatural.
    -- Darth Sidious Based on [`examples/demo.c`](examples/demo.c):
Compile-time list manipulation
```c // 3, 3, 3, 3, 3 static int five_threes[] = { ML99_LIST_EVAL_COMMA_SEP(ML99_listReplicate(v(5), v(3))), }; // 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 static int from_5_to_1[] = { ML99_LIST_EVAL_COMMA_SEP(ML99_listReverse(ML99_list(v(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)))), }; // 9, 2, 5 static int lesser_than_10[] = { ML99_LIST_EVAL_COMMA_SEP( ML99_listFilter(ML99_appl(v(ML99_greater), v(10)), ML99_list(v(9, 2, 11, 13, 5)))), }; ```
Macro recursion
```c #define factorial(n) ML99_natMatch(n, v(factorial_)) #define factorial_Z_IMPL(...) v(1) #define factorial_S_IMPL(n) ML99_mul(ML99_inc(v(n)), factorial(v(n))) ML99_ASSERT_EQ(factorial(v(4)), v(24)); ```
Overloading on a number of arguments
```c typedef struct { double width, height; } Rect; #define Rect_new(...) ML99_OVERLOAD(Rect_new_, __VA_ARGS__) #define Rect_new_1(x) \ { x, x } #define Rect_new_2(x, y) \ { x, y } static Rect _7x8 = Rect_new(7, 8), _10x10 = Rect_new(10); // ... and more! int main(void) { // Yeah. All is done at compile time. } ```
(Hint: `v(something)` evaluates to `something`.) Metalang99 is a firm foundation for writing reliable and maintainable metaprograms in pure C99. It is implemented as an interpreted FP language atop of preprocessor macros: just `#include ` and you are ready to go. Metalang99 features algebraic data types, pattern matching, recursion, currying, and collections; in addition, it provides means for compile-time error reporting and debugging. With our [built-in syntax checker], macro errors should be perfectly comprehensible, enabling you for convenient development. [built-in syntax checker]: #q-what-about-compile-time-errors Currently, Metalang99 is used at [OpenIPC] as an indirect dependency of [Datatype99] and [Interface99]; this includes an [RTSP 1.0 implementation] along with ~50k lines of private code. [OpenIPC]: https://openipc.org/ [RTSP 1.0 implementation]: https://github.com/OpenIPC/smolrtsp/ [Datatype99]: https://github.com/hirrolot/Datatype99 [Interface99]: https://github.com/hirrolot/Interface99 ## Motivation Macros facilitate code re-use, macros are the building material that lets you shape the language to suit the problem being solved, leading to more clean and concise code. However, metaprogramming in C is utterly castrated: we cannot even operate with control flow, integers, unbounded sequences, and compound data structures, thereby throwing a lot of hypothetically useful metaprograms out of scope. To solve the problem, I have implemented Metalang99. Having its functionality at our disposal, it becomes possible to develop even fairly non-trivial metaprograms, such as [Datatype99]: ```c #include datatype( BinaryTree, (Leaf, int), (Node, BinaryTree *, int, BinaryTree *) ); int sum(const BinaryTree *tree) { match(*tree) { of(Leaf, x) return *x; of(Node, lhs, x, rhs) return sum(*lhs) + *x + sum(*rhs); } return -1; } ``` Or [Interface99]: ```c #include #include #define Shape_IFACE \ vfunc( int, perim, const VSelf) \ vfunc(void, scale, VSelf, int factor) interface(Shape); typedef struct { int a, b; } Rectangle; int Rectangle_perim(const VSelf) { /* ... */ } void Rectangle_scale(VSelf, int factor) { /* ... */ } impl(Shape, Rectangle); typedef struct { int a, b, c; } Triangle; int Triangle_perim(const VSelf) { /* ... */ } void Triangle_scale(VSelf, int factor) { /* ... */ } impl(Shape, Triangle); void test(Shape shape) { printf("perim = %d\n", VCALL(shape, perim)); VCALL(shape, scale, 5); printf("perim = %d\n", VCALL(shape, perim)); } ``` Unlike the vague techniques, such as [tagged unions] or [virtual method tables], the above metaprograms leverage type safety, syntax conciseness, and maintain the exact memory layout of generated code. Looks interesting? Check out the [motivational post] for more information. [tagged unions]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tagged_union [virtual method tables]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_method_table [motivational post]: https://hirrolot.github.io/posts/macros-on-steroids-or-how-can-pure-c-benefit-from-metaprogramming.html ## Getting started Metalang99 is just a set of header files and nothing else. To use it as a dependency, you need to: 1. Add `metalang99/include` to include directories. 2. Specify [`-ftrack-macro-expansion=0`] (GCC) or [`-fmacro-backtrace-limit=1`] (Clang) to avoid useless macro expansion errors. [`-ftrack-macro-expansion=0`]: https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Preprocessor-Options.html [`-fmacro-backtrace-limit=1`]: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ClangCommandLineReference.html#cmdoption-clang-fmacro-backtrace-limit If you use CMake, the recommended way is [`FetchContent`]: [`FetchContent`]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FetchContent.html ```cmake include(FetchContent) FetchContent_Declare( metalang99 URL https://github.com/hirrolot/metalang99/archive/refs/tags/vx.y.z.tar.gz # vx.y.z ) FetchContent_MakeAvailable(metalang99) target_link_libraries(MyProject metalang99) # Disable full macro expansion backtraces for Metalang99. if(CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ID STREQUAL "Clang") target_compile_options(MyProject PRIVATE -fmacro-backtrace-limit=1) elseif(CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ID STREQUAL "GNU") target_compile_options(MyProject PRIVATE -ftrack-macro-expansion=0) endif() ``` Optionally, you can [precompile headers] in your project that rely on Metalang99. This will decrease compilation time because the headers will not be compiled each time they are included. [precompile headers]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precompiled_header [Tutorial](https://hirrolot.gitbook.io/metalang99/) | [Examples](examples/) | [User documentation](https://metalang99.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) Happy hacking! ## Highlights - **Macro recursion.** Recursive calls behave as expected. In particular, to implement recursion, [Boost/Preprocessor] just copy-pastes all recursive functions up to a certain limit and forces to either keep track of recursion depth or rely on their built-in deduction. Being an interpreter, Metalang99 is free from such drawbacks. - **Almost the same syntax.** Metalang99 does not look too alien in comparison with [Order PP] because the syntax differs insignificantly from usual preprocessor code. - **Partial application.** Instead of tracking auxiliary arguments here and there (as it is done in Boost/Preprocessor), Metalang99's partial application allows to capture an environment by applying constant values first. Besides that, partial application facilitates better reuse of metafunctions; see `ML99_const`, `ML99_compose`, etc. - **Debugging and error reporting.** You can conveniently debug your macros with `ML99_abort` and report unrecoverable errors with `ML99_fatal`. The interpreter will immediately halt and do the trick. To the best of our knowledge, no other macro framework provides such a mechanism for debugging and error reporting. [Boost/Preprocessor]: http://boost.org/libs/preprocessor [Order PP]: https://github.com/rofl0r/order-pp ## Philosophy and origins My work on [Poica], a research programming language implemented upon [Boost/Preprocessor], has left me unsatisfied with the result. The fundamental limitations of Boost/Preprocessor have made the codebase simply unmaintainable; these include recursive macro calls (blocked by the preprocessor), which have made debugging a complete nightmare, the absence of partial application that has made context passing utterly awkward, and every single mistake that resulted in megabytes of compiler error messages. Only then I have understood that instead of enriching the preprocessor with various ad-hoc mechanisms, we should really establish a clear paradigm in which to structure metaprograms. With these thoughts in mind, I started to implement Metalang99... Long story short, it took half of a year of hard work to release v0.1.0 and almost a year to make it stable. As a real-world application of Metalang99, I created [Datatype99] exactly of the same form I wanted it to be: the implementation is highly declarative, the syntax is nifty, and the semantics is well-defined. Finally, I want to say that Metalang99 is only about syntax transformations and not about CPU-bound tasks; the preprocessor is just too slow and limited for such kind of abuse. [Poica]: https://github.com/hirrolot/poica ## Guidelines - If possible, assert macro parameters for well-formedness using `ML99_assertIsTuple`, `ML99_assertIsNat`, etc. for better diagnostic messages. - Prefer the `##` token-pasting operator inside [Metalang99-compliant macros] instead of `ML99_cat` or its friends, because arguments will nevertheless be fully expanded. - Use [`ML99_todo` and its friends] to indicate unimplemented functionality. [Metalang99-compliant macros]: https://metalang99.readthedocs.io/en/latest/#definitions [`ML99_todo` and its friends]: https://metalang99.readthedocs.io/en/latest/util.html#c.ML99_todo ## Blog posts - [_Pretty-Printable Enumerations in Pure C_](https://hirrolot.github.io/posts/pretty-printable-enumerations-in-pure-c.html) - [_What’s the Point of the C Preprocessor, Actually?_] - [_Macros on Steroids, Or: How Can Pure C Benefit From Metaprogramming_](https://hirrolot.github.io/posts/macros-on-steroids-or-how-can-pure-c-benefit-from-metaprogramming.html) - [_Extend Your Language, Don’t Alter It_](https://hirrolot.github.io/posts/extend-your-language-dont-alter-it.html) [_What’s the Point of the C Preprocessor, Actually?_]: https://hirrolot.github.io/posts/whats-the-point-of-the-c-preprocessor-actually.html ## Contributing See [`CONTRIBUTING.md`](CONTRIBUTING.md). ## Architecture See [`ARCHITECTURE.md`](ARCHITECTURE.md). ## Idioms See [`idioms.md`](idioms.md). ## Optimization tips See [`optimization_tips.md`](optimization_tips.md). ## Release procedure 1. Update the `PROJECT_NUMBER` field in `Doxyfile`. 2. Update the `release` field in `docs/conf.py`. 3. Update `ML99_MAJOR`, `ML99_MINOR`, and `ML99_PATCH` in `include/metalang99.h`. 4. Update the version number in `spec/spec.tex` & `spec/spec.pdf`. 5. Update `CHANGELOG.md`. 6. Release the project in [GitHub Releases]. [GitHub Releases]: https://github.com/hirrolot/metalang99/releases ## FAQ ### Q: What about compile-time errors? A: Metalang99 is a big step towards understandable compiler diagnostics. It has a built-in syntax checker that tests all incoming terms for validity: [`playground.c`] ```c ML99_EVAL(123) ML99_EVAL(x, y, z) ML99_EVAL(v(Billie) v(Jean)) ``` [`/bin/sh`] ``` $ gcc playground.c -Imetalang99/include -ftrack-macro-expansion=0 playground.c:3:1: error: static assertion failed: "invalid term `123`" 3 | ML99_EVAL(123) | ^~~~~~~~~ playground.c:4:1: error: static assertion failed: "invalid term `x`" 4 | ML99_EVAL(x, y, z) | ^~~~~~~~~ playground.c:5:1: error: static assertion failed: "invalid term `(0v, Billie) (0v, Jean)`, did you miss a comma?" 5 | ML99_EVAL(v(Billie) v(Jean)) | ^~~~~~~~~ ``` Metalang99 can even check for macro preconditions and report an error: [`playground.c`] ```c ML99_EVAL(ML99_listHead(ML99_nil())) ML99_EVAL(ML99_unwrapLeft(ML99_right(v(123)))) ML99_EVAL(ML99_div(v(18), v(4))) ``` [`/bin/sh`] ``` $ gcc playground.c -Imetalang99/include -ftrack-macro-expansion=0 playground.c:3:1: error: static assertion failed: "ML99_listHead: expected a non-empty list" 3 | ML99_EVAL(ML99_listHead(ML99_nil())) | ^~~~~~~~~ playground.c:4:1: error: static assertion failed: "ML99_unwrapLeft: expected ML99_left but found ML99_right" 4 | ML99_EVAL(ML99_unwrapLeft(ML99_right(v(123)))) | ^~~~~~~~~ playground.c:5:1: error: static assertion failed: "ML99_div: 18 is not divisible by 4" 5 | ML99_EVAL(ML99_div(v(18), v(4))) | ^~~~~~~~~ ``` However, if you do something awkward, compile-time errors can become quite obscured: ```c // ML99_PRIV_REC_NEXT_ML99_PRIV_IF_0 blah(ML99_PRIV_SYNTAX_CHECKER_EMIT_ERROR, ML99_PRIV_TERM_MATCH) ((~, ~, ~) blah, ML99_PRIV_EVAL_)(ML99_PRIV_REC_STOP, (~), 0fspace, (, ), ((0end, ~), ~), ~, ~ blah)(0)() ML99_EVAL((~, ~, ~) blah) ``` In either case, you can try to [iteratively debug your metaprogram](https://hirrolot.gitbook.io/metalang99/testing-debugging-and-error-reporting). From my experience, 95% of errors are comprehensible -- Metalang99 is built for humans, not for macro monsters. ### Q: What about debugging? A: See the chapter [_"Testing, debugging, and error reporting"_](https://hirrolot.gitbook.io/metalang99/testing-debugging-and-error-reporting). ### Q: What about IDE support? A: I use VS Code for development. It enables pop-up suggestments of macro-generated constructions but, of course, it does not support macro syntax highlighting. ### Q: Compilation times? A: To run the benchmarks, execute `./scripts/bench.sh` from the root directory. ### Q: How does it work? A: 1. Because macro recursion is prohibited, there is an ad-hoc [recursion engine] which works by deferring macro expansions and passing continuations here and there. 2. Upon it, the [continuation-passing style] [interpreter] reduces language expressions into final results. 3. The standard library is nothing but a set of metafunctions implemented using the core metalanguage, i.e. they are to be evaluated by the interpreter. [recursion engine]: include/metalang99/eval/rec.h [interpreter]: include/metalang99/eval/eval.h [continuation-passing style]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuation-passing_style ### Q: Why not third-party code generators? A: See the blog post [_"What’s the Point of the C Preprocessor, Actually?"_](https://hirrolot.github.io/posts/whats-the-point-of-the-c-preprocessor-actually.html) ### Q: Is it Turing-complete? A: The C/C++ preprocessor is capable to iterate only [up to a certain limit](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3136686/is-the-c99-preprocessor-turing-complete). For Metalang99, this limit is defined in terms of reductions steps: once a fixed amount of reduction steps is exhausted, your metaprogram will not be able to execute anymore. ### Q: Why macros if we have templates? A: Metalang99 is primarily targeted at pure C, and C lacks templates. But anyway, you can find the argumentation for C++ at the website of [Boost/Preprocessor]. ### Q: Which standards are supported? A: C99/C++11 and onwards. ### Q: Which compilers are tested? A: Metalang99 is known to work on these compilers: - GCC - Clang - MSVC - TCC