File psl-1983/help/for.hlp artifact e358e9c75b part of check-in 58a25bf8df


FOR is a general iteration construct similar in many ways to the Lisp
Machine LOOP construct, and the earlier InterLISP CLISP iteration
construct.  FOR, however, is considerably simpler, far more "lispy",
and somewhat less powerful.  FOR is loaded as part of the USEFUL
package.  It is hoped that eventuall the RLISP parser will be modified
to emit calls on this new FOR macro instead of the old one.

The arguments to FOR are clauses; each clause is itself a list of a
keyword and one or more arguments.  The clauses may introduce local
variables, specify return values, have side-effects, when the iteration
should cease, and so on.  Before
going further, it is probably best to give an example.  The following
function will zip together three lists into a list of three element
lists.

(de zip3 (x y z) (for (in u x) (in v y) (in w z) (collect (list u v w))))

The three IN clauses specify that their first argument should take
successive elements of the respective lists, and the COLLECT clause specifies
that the answer should be a list built out of its argument.  For
example, (zip3 '(1 2 3 4) '(a b c d) '(w x y z)) is 
((1 a w)(2 b x)(3 c y)(4 d z)).

Following are described all the possible clauses.  The first few
introduce iteration variables.  Most of these also give some means of
indicating when iteration should cease.  For example, when a list being
mapped over by an IN clause is exhausted, iteration must cease.  If
several such clauses are given in FOR expression, iteration will cease
whenever on of the clauses indicates it should, whether or not the
other clauses indicate that it should cease.



(in v1 v2) assigns the variable v1 successive elements of the list v2.

This may take an additional, optional argument:
a function to be applied to the extracted element or sublist  before
it is assigned to the variable.   The following returns the sum of  the
lengths of all the elements of L. [rather a kludge -- not sure why this
is here.  Perhaps it should come out again.]

  (de SumLengths (L) (for (in N L length) (sum N)))
      
For example, (SumLengths '((1 2 3 4 5)(a b c)(x y))) is 10.



(on v1 v2) assigns the varaible v1 successive cdrs of the list v2.



(from var init final step) is a numeric clause.  The variable is first
assigned init, and then incremented by step until it is larger than
final.  Init, final, and step are optional.  Init and step both default
to 1, and if final is omitted the iteration will continue until
stopped by some other means.  To specify a step with init or final
omitted, or a final with init omitted place nil (the constant -- it
cannot be an expression) in the appropriate slot to be omitted.
Final and step are only evaluated once.



(for var init next) assigns the variable init first, and subsequently
the value of the expression next.  Init and next may be omitted.  Note
that this is identical to the behaviour of iterators in a DO.



(with v1 v2 ... vN) introduces N locals, initialized to nil.  In
addition, each vi may also be of the form (var init), in which case it
will be initialized to init.



There are two clauses which allow arbitrary code to be executed before
the first iteration, and after the last.  (initially s1 s2 ... sN) will
cause the si's to be evaluated in the new environment (i.e. with the
iteration variables bound to their initial values) before the first
iteration.  (finally s1 s2 ... sN) causes the si's to be evaluated just
before the function returns.



(do s1 s2 ... sN) causes the si's to be evaluated at each iteration.



The next few clauses build up return types.  Except for the
RETURNS/RETURNING clause, they may each take an additional argument
which specifies that instead of returning the appropriate value, it is
accumulated in the specified variable.  For example, an unzipper might
be defined as 

(de unzip3 (L)
  (for (u in L) (with X Y Z)
    (collect (car U) X)
    (collect (cadr U) Y)
    (collect (caddr U) Z)
    (returns (list X Y Z))))

This is essentially the opposite of zip3.  Given a list of three element
lists, it unzips them into three lists, and returns a list of those
three lists.  For example, (unzip '((1 a w)(2 b x)(3 c y)(4 d z)))
is ((1 2 3 4)(a b c d)(w x y z)).



(returns exp) causes the given expression  to be the value of the  FOR.
Returning is  synonymous  with returns.   It  may be  given  additional
arguments, in which case they are  evaluated in order and the value  of
the last is returned (implicit PROGN).



(collect exp) causes the succesive values of the expression to be
collected into a list.



(union exp) is similar, but only adds an element to the list if it is
not equal to anything already there.



(conc exp) causes the succesive values to be nconc'd together.



(join exp) causes them to be appended.



(count exp) returns the number of times exp was non-nil.



(sum exp), (product exp), (maximize exp), and (minimize exp) do the obvious.
Synonyms are summing, maximizing, and minimizing.



(always exp) will return t if exp is non-nil on each iteration.  If exp
is ever nil, the loop will terminate immediately, no epilogue code,
such as that introduced by finally will be run, and nil will be
returned.  (never exp) is equivlent to (always (not exp)).



Explicit tests for the end of the loop may be given using (while exp).
The loop will terminate if exp becomes nil at the beginning of an
iteration.  (until exp) is equivalent to (while (not exp)).
Both while and until may be given additional arguments;
(while e1 e2 ... eN) is equivalent to (while (and e1 e2 ... eN))
and (until  e1 e2 ... eN) is equivalent to (until (or e1 e2 ... eN)).




(when exp) will cause a jump to the next iteration if exp is nil.
(unless exp) is equivalent to (when (not exp)).



Unlike MACLISP and clones' LOOP, FOR does all variable binding/updating
in  parallel.   There  is  a   similar  macro,  FOR*,  which  does   it
sequentially.  All variable binding/updating  still preceeds any  tests
or other code.  Also note that all WHEN or UNLESS clauses apply to  all
action  clauses,  not  just  subsequent  ones.   This  fixed  order  of
evaluation makes  FOR  less  powerful  than LOOP,  but  also  keeps  it
considerably simpler.  The basic order of evaluation is 

  1) bind variables to initial values (computed in the outer environment)
  2) execute prologue (i.e. INITIALLY clauses)
  3) while none of the termination conditions are satisfied:
     4) check conditionalization clauses (WHEN and UNLESS), and start next
	iteration if all are not satisfied.
     5) perform body, collecting into variables as necessary
     6) next iteration
  7) (after a termination condition is satisfied) execute the epilogue (i. e.
     FINALLY clauses)



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