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Re: [PATCH] doc: describe the -e (module) shorthand as on equal footing
From: |
Arne Babenhauserheide |
Subject: |
Re: [PATCH] doc: describe the -e (module) shorthand as on equal footing with (@ ...) |
Date: |
Thu, 29 Sep 2016 17:14:55 +0200 |
User-agent: |
mu4e 0.9.16; emacs 24.5.1 |
Andy Wingo writes:
> On Wed 06 Jul 2016 23:14, Arne Babenhauserheide <address@hidden> writes:
>
>> Does the following suffice as ChangeLog entry?
>>
>>
>> 2016-05-18 Arne Babenhauserheide <address@hidden>
>>
>> * doc/ref/guile-invoke.texi, doc/ref/scheme-scripts.texi:
>> describe the -e (module) shorthand as on equal footing with (@ ...)
>>
>>
>> It’s mostly generated with hg log --template changelog -r tip.
>
> Hi,
>
> In Guile we work with git :) If you would like a patch applied, please
> attach it in git-format-patch format, with the commit log in the
> standard format. Check the git logs for examples. It's easy: just do
> "git commit -a", paste in your change log with the summary line and no
> indentation, then "git format-patch HEAD^".
Sorry for answering late. I missed your answer again (just noticed the
unresolved todo in my agenda and checked explicitly).
I now essentially typed in your commands, plus some manual patch -p1 to
use my own patch :)
Is this OK?
From 4751b9c4c85152281f0d57eda6a1c4ce50166ad4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Arne Babenhauserheide <address@hidden>
Date: Thu, 29 Sep 2016 17:11:26 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] describe the -e (module) shorthand as on equal footing with
(@ ...)
* doc/ref/guile-invoke.texi, doc/ref/scheme-scripts.texi:
describe the -e (module) shorthand as on equal footing with (@ ...)
---
doc/ref/guile-invoke.texi | 15 +++++------
doc/ref/scheme-scripts.texi | 62 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2 files changed, 68 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)
diff --git a/doc/ref/guile-invoke.texi b/doc/ref/guile-invoke.texi
index bc33ce0..e25960a 100644
--- a/doc/ref/guile-invoke.texi
+++ b/doc/ref/guile-invoke.texi
@@ -102,15 +102,12 @@ that is defined in the script. It can also be of the
form @code{(@@
@var{module-name} @var{symbol})}, and in that case, the symbol is
looked up in the module named @var{module-name}.
-For compatibility with some versions of Guile 1.4, you can also use the
-form @code{(symbol ...)} (that is, a list of only symbols that doesn't
-start with @code{@@}), which is equivalent to @code{(@@ (symbol ...)
-main)}, or @code{(symbol ...) symbol} (that is, a list of only symbols
-followed by a symbol), which is equivalent to @code{(@@ (symbol ...)
-symbol)}. We recommend to use the equivalent forms directly since they
-correspond to the @code{(@@ ...)} read syntax that can be used in
-normal code. See @ref{Using Guile Modules} and @ref{Scripting
-Examples}.
+As a shorthand you can use the form @code{(symbol ...)}, that is, a
+list of only symbols that doesn't start with @code{@@}. It is
+equivalent to @code{(@@ @var{module-name} main)} with @code{(symbol ...)}
+the @var{module-name}. To use a different function than @var{main},
+you can use the form @code{(symbol ...) function}. See @ref{Using
+Guile Modules} and @ref{Scripting Examples}.
@item -ds
Treat a final @option{-s} option as if it occurred at this point in the
diff --git a/doc/ref/scheme-scripts.texi b/doc/ref/scheme-scripts.texi
index 7552dba..4999a47 100644
--- a/doc/ref/scheme-scripts.texi
+++ b/doc/ref/scheme-scripts.texi
@@ -293,6 +293,11 @@ and exit.
Load the file @file{/u/jimb/ex4}, and then call the function
@code{main}, passing it the list @code{("/u/jimb/ex4" "foo")}.
address@hidden guile -e '(ex4)' -s /u/jimb/ex4.scm foo
+Load the file @file{/u/jimb/ex4.scm}, and then call the function
address@hidden from the module '(ex4)', passing it the list
address@hidden("/u/jimb/ex4" "foo")}.
+
@item guile -l first -ds -l last -s script
Load the files @file{first}, @file{script}, and @file{last}, in that
order. The @code{-ds} switch says when to process the @code{-s}
@@ -402,6 +407,63 @@ $ ./choose 50 100
100891344545564193334812497256
@end example
+To execute the function main from a module, we can use the special form
address@hidden(@@ (module) function)}:
address@hidden
+#!/usr/local/bin/guile \
+-l fact -e (@@ (fac) main) -s
+!#
+(define-module (fac)
+ #:export (main))
+
+(define (choose n m)
+ (/ (fact m) (* (fact (- m n)) (fact n))))
+
+(define (main args)
+ (let ((n (string->number (cadr args)))
+ (m (string->number (caddr args))))
+ (display (choose n m))
+ (newline)))
address@hidden example
+
+We can use @code{@@@@} to run non-exported functions. For exported
+functions, we can simplify this call with the shorthand @code{(module)}:
address@hidden
+#!/usr/local/bin/guile \
+-l fact -e (fac) -s
+!#
+(define-module (fac)
+ #:export (main))
+
+(define (choose n m)
+ (/ (fact m) (* (fact (- m n)) (fact n))))
+
+(define (main args)
+ (let ((n (string->number (cadr args)))
+ (m (string->number (caddr args))))
+ (display (choose n m))
+ (newline)))
address@hidden example
+
+For maximum portability among *nixes, we can use the shell to
address@hidden guile with specified command line arguments. Here we need to
+take care to quote the command arguments correctly:
address@hidden
+#!/usr/bin env sh
+exec guile -l fact -e '(@@ (fac) main)' -s "$0" "$@"
+!#
+(define-module (fac)
+ #:export (main))
+
+(define (choose n m)
+ (/ (fact m) (* (fact (- m n)) (fact n))))
+
+(define (main args)
+ (let ((n (string->number (cadr args)))
+ (m (string->number (caddr args))))
+ (display (choose n m))
+ (newline)))
address@hidden example
@c Local Variables:
@c TeX-master: "guile.texi"
--
2.7.3
Best wishes,
Arne
--
Unpolitisch sein
heißt politisch sein
ohne es zu merken
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