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Issue SUBTYPEP-TOO-VAGUE Writeup

Status:	Passed, as amended, Jun89 X3J13

Issue: SUBTYPEP-TOO-VAGUE

References: CLtL p. 72-73

Category: CLARIFICATION

Edit History: Version 1, 11 Jul 1988 (Sandra Loosemore)

Version 2, 19 Jul 1988 (Sandra Loosemore)

Version 3, 6-Oct-88 (Masinter)

Version 4, 7-Oct-88 (Masinter, per Moon's comments)

Version 5, 15-Mar-89 Steele

Version 6, 2-Jul-89 Masinter (as per Jun89X3J13)

Problem Description:

[From version 4]

The description of SUBTYPEP allows it to return a second value of NIL

when the relationship between the two types cannot be determined. In

some cases this is a reasonable thing to do because it is impossible

to tell (if the SATISFIES type specifier is involved), and in other

cases the relationships between types are not well-defined (for

example, the VALUES type specifier or the list form of the FUNCTION

type specifier).

Some implementations, however, have apparently interpreted this to

mean that it is permissible for SUBTYPEP to "give up" and return a

second value of NIL in some cases where it actually would be possible

to determine the relationship. This makes it difficult to depend on

subtype relationships in portable code.

[Addition for version 5]

There are two problems with version 4. First is that of the first three

bulleted points in the version 4 proposal:

* Clarify that SUBTYPEP will return a second value of NIL

only when either of the type specifiers involves the SATISFIES, NOT,

AND, OR, MEMBER. SUBTYPEP will not return a second

value of NIL when both arguments involve only the words in Table 4-1, or

names of DEFSTRUCT- or DEFCLASS-defined types, or user-defined deftypes

that expand into only those words and/or names.

* SUBTYPEP should signal an error when handed (for either argument)

a type specifier that involves VALUES or the list form of the FUNCTION

type.

* SUBTYPEP must always return values T T in the case where the two

type specifiers (or their expansions) are EQUAL.

any two have significant overlap, and indeed all three can overlap;

version 4 contained no indication of how this conflict should be resolved.

Second is that version 4 calls for SUBTYPEP to signal an error (at least at

high safety)even when the arguments are valid type specifiers, but this can

make it harder to use SUBTYPEP. These are cases that returning NIL NIL

was supposed to cover.

This version replaces the three bulleted points above with a single point

and some observations about its consequences. This version eliminates

the requirement to signal an error.

Proposal: SUBTYPEP-TOO-VAGUE:CLARIFY-MORE

A type specifier "involves" a word like SATISFIES, MEMBER, NOT, etc.

if it either contains it directly as a type specifier,

or as the result of expansion of a DEFTYPE defined type specifier.

(While the type specifiers listed in CLtL Table 4-1 and names of

DEFSTRUCT or DEFCLASS-defined types may, in some cases, be implemented

in terms of DEFTYPE, they are to be regarded for this purpose as not

being "user-defined". Therefore, SUBTYPEP must regard elements as

primitive with respect to the question of returning NIL NIL.)

* Clarify that SUBTYPEP is permitted to return NIL NIL only when

at least one argument involves SATISFIES, AND, OR, NOT, MEMBER,

VALUES, or the list form of FUNCTION.

Note that one consequence of this is that if neither argument

involves any of these type specifiers, then SUBTYPEP is obliged

to determine the relationship accurately. In particular, SUBTYPEP

must return T T if the arguments are EQUAL and do not involve

any of the above-stated type specifiers.

* Clarify that the relationships between types reflected by SUBTYPEP

are those specific to the particular implementation. For example, if

an implementation supports only a single type of floating-point numbers,

in that implementation (SUBTYPEP 'FLOAT 'LONG-FLOAT) would return T T

(since the two types would be identical).

Rationale:

Specifying the behavior of SUBTYPEP makes it more useful. Otherwise,

programs cannot rely on any more than NIL NIL as return values.

It is generally conceded that it is impossible to determine the

relationships between types defined with the SATISFIES specifier.

MEMBER, AND, OR, and NOT are messy to deal with.

Current Practice:

The implementation of SUBTYPEP in (the original) HPCL does not try to

expand type specifiers defined with DEFTYPE and does not recognize

EQUAL type specifiers as being equivalent. Most other implementations

appear to be substantially in conformance with the proposal.

Cost to implementors:

Some implementations will have to rewrite and/or extend parts of SUBTYPEP.

Cost to users:

Its hard to imagine a portable program that depends heavily

on SUBTYPEP. This proposal does not require any implementation

to "handle" fewer cases of SUBTYPEP.

Benefits:

An area of confusion in the language is cleared up. Usages of SUBTYPEP

will be more portable.

Discussion:

The handling of FLOAT and SINGLE-FLOAT appeared to be the

consensus from a discussion on the common-lisp mailing list some

time ago.

It would not be too onerous to require implementations to handle

the cases where one but not the other type specifier involves

OR, AND, NOT or MEMBER, but the specification becomes

cumbersome.

A related issue is clarifying what kinds of type specifiers must be

recognized by functions such as MAKE-SEQUENCE and COERCE. For example,

HPCL complains that (SIMPLE-ARRAY (UNSIGNED-BYTE *) (*)) is not a valid

sequence type when passed to MAKE-SEQUENCE, although SUBTYPEP does

recognize it to be a subtype of SEQUENCE. Should this proposal be

extended to deal with these issues, or is another proposal in order?

The rules for comparing the various type specifiers (such as ARRAY)

need to be spelled out in detail.


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