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Re: speedup of modifying return values
From: |
Taylan Kammer |
Subject: |
Re: speedup of modifying return values |
Date: |
Wed, 29 Aug 2018 20:46:52 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/26.1 (gnu/linux) |
Stefan Israelsson Tampe <address@hidden> writes:
> Hi all, I'm trying to make a python clone in guile. Currently the code is
> slow and one of the reasons is the following,
>
> in my pythoon
>
> return 1,2
>
> returns a (values 1 2) in order to get python and scheme to interoperate. but
> for python if you use
>
> x = 1,2
>
> then x is the tupple '(1 2) and in guile it is 1. So therefore we wrap the
> result for
>
> x=f(10)
>
> as
> (set! x (call-with-values (lambda () (f x)) (case-lambda ((x) x) (x x))))
>
> This can be compiled to efficient bytecode but is not done so in guile. In
> stead a closure is created at each assignment site and creating ineficient
> code.
>
> Any ideas how to improve this (I don't want "return a,b" to mean (list a b)
> which is a quick solution
> if we want to just stay in python and not interoperate with scheme at all on
> this level.
Sounds like a fun project. :-)
Idea:
Make Python tuples a new data type, instead of multi-values.
The fact that they can be stored in a single storage location in Python
means that they are actually a data type, only special-handled for
automatic destructuring in some places...
Therefore, I would represent them as a record type under the hood.
Maybe one with a single field that contains a list or a vector.
I would then compile Python syntax that destructures tuples into
corresponding Guile code that destructures them also.
> Regards
> Stefan
Happy hacking,
Taylan