Why does tcl consider an empty string a double? - tcl

Quite confused about this one:
$ tclsh
% string is double {}
1
Why would tcl consider an empty string to be a valid double?

Summary: It's a bit of a misdesign and was a place where the initial use-case was the wrong one, but we can't change it in 8.* (I'm not sure about Tcl 9.0; we still want to avoid gratuitous changes there).
The string is command was originally designed to support the Tk entry widget's validation options. These let the widget respond to typing (or focus changs) by checking whether the change made the widget be in a valid state, such as holding a integer. If you wanted that, you'd just do this:
entry $w -validate key -vcmd {string is integer %P} -invcmd {bell}
Then, if you pressed a letter key, say A, with the cursor in the middle of an integer, the edit would be rejected and the system would make a warning noise. Really easy.
There's only one slight problem. If you had selected all the text in the entry and the pressed a digit, the edit would also be rejected (if string is was strict by default). The problem is that there's an intermediate transition state in the edit where the old text is deleted but before the new text is inserted: the validation occurs twice in such a situation, once for the delete and once for the insert. (It has to be that way because of the way things are tied together under the hood.) That's a terrible user experience, so string is was made lax by default so that this use case would work.
It's not a decision I agreed with — it should have been the other way round, with you needing to request laxity in the test if you want it, which would have added very little overhead here while allowing other uses to be saner — but I was just an ordinary user at that point. I prefer to use a multi-stage validation in my forms, such as using keypress level validation as a soft validation that allows bad input while the user is part-way through using the form, and just indicates that it knows that problems exist anyway, via techniques such as adjusting background colours and disabling submit buttons. (But that's off-topic for your question…)
Library command design is tricky. It takes careful consideration of use-cases to get right. Sometimes we fail.
The problem originated in code that was external to Tcl and Tk in about the time of Tcl 8.1.0. Most of the patch that introduced this was very good (it also gave us commands such as string equal and string map) but this was an aspect that could have done with a little more cooking.

Related

Why is my %h is List = 1,2; a valid assignment?

While finalizing my upcoming Raku Advent Calendar post on sigils, I decided to double-check my understanding of the type constraints that sigils create. The docs describe sigil type constraints with the table
below:
Based on this table (and my general understanding of how sigils and containers work), I strongly expected this code
my %percent-sigil is List = 1,2;
my #at-sigil is Map = :k<v>;
to throw an error.
Specifically, I expected that is List would attempt to bind the %-sigiled variable to a List, and that this would throw an X::TypeCheck::Binding error – the same error that my %h := 1,2 throws.
But it didn't error. The first line created a List that seemed perfectly ordinary in every way, other than the sigil on its variable. And the second created a seemingly normal Map. Neither of them secretly had Scalar intermediaries, at least as far as I could tell with VAR and similar introspection.
I took a very quick look at the World.nqp source code, and it seems at least plausible that discarding the % type constraint with is List is intended behavior.
So, is this behavior correct/intended? If so, why? And how does that fit in with the type constraints and other guarantees that sigils typically provide?
(I have to admit, seeing an %-sigiled variable that doesn't support Associative indexing kind of shocked me…)
I think this is a grey area, somewhere between DIHWIDT (Docter, It Hurts When I Do This) and an oversight in implementation.
Thing is, you can create your own class and use that in the is trait. Basically, that overrides the type with which the object will be created from the default Hash (for %) and Array (for # sigils). As long as you provide the interface methods, it (currently) works. For example:
class Foo {
method AT-KEY($) { 42 }
}
my %h is Foo;
say %h<a>; # 42
However, if you want to pass such an object as an argument to a sub with a % sigil in the signature, it will fail because the class did not consume the Associatve role:
sub bar(%) { 666 }
say bar(%h);
===SORRY!=== Error while compiling -e
Calling bar(A) will never work with declared signature (%)
I'm not sure why the test for Associative (for the % sigil) and Positional (for #) is not enforced at compile time with the is trait. I would assume it was an oversight, maybe something to be fixed in 6.e.
Quoting the Parameters and arguments section of the S06 specification/speculation document about the related issue of binding arguments to routine parameters:
Array and hash parameters are simply bound "as is". (Conjectural: future versions ... may do static analysis and forbid assignments to array and hash parameters that can be caught by it. This will, however, only happen with the appropriate use declaration to opt in to that language version.)
Sure enough the Rakudo compiler implemented some rudimentary static analysis (in its AOT compilation optimization pass) that normally (but see footnote 3 in this SO answer) insists on binding # routine parameters to values that do the Positional role and % ones to Associatives.
I think this was the case from the first official Raku supporting release of Rakudo, in 2016, but regardless, I'm pretty sure the "appropriate use declaration" is any language version declaration, including none. If your/our druthers are static typing for the win for # and % sigils, and I think they are, then that's presumably very appropriate!
Another source is the IRC logs. A quick search quickly got me nothing.
Hmm. Let's check the blame for the above verbiage so I can find when it was last updated and maybe spot contemporaneous IRC discussion. Oooh.
That is an extraordinary read.
"oversight" isn't the right word.
I don't have time tonight to search the IRC logs to see what led up to that commit, but I daresay it's interesting. The previous text was talking about a PL design I really liked the sound of in terms of immutability, such that code could become increasingly immutable by simply swapping out one kind of scalar container for another. Very nice! But reality is important, and Jonathan switched the verbiage to the implementation reality. The switch toward static typing certainty is welcome, but has it seriously harmed the performance and immutability options? I don't know. Time for me to go to sleep and head off for seasonal family visits. Happy holidays...

Questions about the Boundary Value Check

I'm doing my JUnit homework and need some explanations here.
Here's the quotation from my homework description:
One of the issues with boundary conditions is that the system needs to behave well even if the boundary is approached multiple times. This should be obvious, but it doesn't always happen in practice.
Remember that we can characterize an object as state and behavior. Typically, the state is not directly accessible, but instead, is accessed indirectly by means of the behavior. That is, the behavior reflects the state of the object.
Now, if we think about boundaries in math, it might not be too surprising to imagine the the value at some boundary will be different if we approach that boundary in different ways. So, if the value can be likened to the state, the state at the boundary may vary depending on how we got there. This would mean that the behavior could be different.
To make objects that behave consistently, we would have to insure that the internal state at those boundaries is consistent. So, test cases should check this assumption. To receive challenge points for this homework assignment enhance your test cases so that potential problems around the boundaries may be discovered.
Clearly mark the Challenge test cases with the string "### challenge ###" in the comments. Include in those comments what boundary is being tested, and how you're guessing that the state of the object may be different depending on how the boundary is being approached.
I don't understand this especially the highlighted part. What does he mean by "object behave consistently" and the "potential probelms"?
Also, how is this different than general boundary check that will just throws the exception and i expected in the JUnit?
Thank you!
Without knowing the details of the homework, an answer could only be somewhat generic, but I'll try.
Boundary checking is not just exception checking, its about seeing which paths in your code are execution on what condition. If you have control statements, loops, if-else, switch, etc you have to verify, on what conditions (of your internal state) those statements are processed in what way.
To me, boundary testing is that you change certain values of an instance field in a way that would cause the behavior to run through different branches of your code.
for example, you have this behavior:
if(someInstanceValue > 5) {
return "great";
} else {
return "poor";
}
Now you could test with data for someInstanceValue that define the boundary
4 : "poor"
5 : "great"
If you have multiple fields in your class, all of them define the state but only some of them may affect a certain path in your code. As the test is a specification of your class under test, written in code, you should specify which fields are relevant to a function, and which are not (by leaving them out).
So you should set up your instance-under-test accordingly (calling all setters) or if you require more complex objects, you could use frameworks like Mockito to specify the state (in a when().thenReturn() syntax).
If you want to verify if you covered all your boundaries, you could run a mutation test against your suite using a mutation testing tool like PIT. It will flip the switches in your code (i.e. replacing a < with a >=) to check whether your test will fail. Often, it's a good source of inspiration for improving the way you test.
Neverthelss, some parts of the homework assignment sound a bit confusing to me. You may approach a boundary from two sides, ok, but there is no such thing as a state that represents THE boundary, you're either on one or the other side of the boundary. If the way, how you approached one side of a boundary matters, and the object behaves differently depending on that "history" of how you reached that state, the history becomes part of the state. In other words: different history = different state.
Keep in mind: every instance field is part of the state. Every possible combination of values of your instance fields defines a single state. Every transition from one combination to another is a state transition triggered by calling a behavior. No think of your test describing this statemachine, be listing the triple of {currentState,input} -> nextState (with input being method invocation). Wich is basically the Given-When-Then structure good tests should have.

Equivalent of abbrev-mode but for functions?

I'm a big fan of abbrev-mode and I'd like something a bit similar: you start typing and as soon as you enter some punctation (or just a space would be enough) it invokes a function (if I type space after a special abbreviation, of course, just like abbrev-mode does).
I definitely do NOT want to execute some function every single time I hit space...
So instead of expanding the abbreviation using abbrev-mode, it would run a function of my choice.
Of course it needs to be compatible with abbrev-mode, which I use all the time.
How can I get this behavior?
One approach could be to use pre-abbrev-expand-hook. I don't use abbrev mode myself, but it rather sounds as if you could re-use the abbrev mode machinery this way, and simply define some 'abbreviations' which expand to themselves (or to nothing?), and then you catch them in that hook and take whatever action you wish to.
The expand library is apparently related, and that provides expand-expand-hook, which may be another alternative?
edit: Whoops; pre-abbrev-expand-hook is obsolete since 23.1
abbrev-expand-functions is the correct variable to use:
Wrapper hook around `expand-abbrev'.
The functions on this special hook are called with one argument:
a function that performs the abbrev expansion. It should return
the abbrev symbol if expansion took place.
See M-x find-function RET expand-abbrev RET for the code, and you'll also want to read C-h f with-wrapper-hook RET to understand how this hook is used.
EDIT:
Your revised question adds some key details that my answer didn't address. phils has provided one way to approach this issue. Another would be to use yasnippet . You can include arbitrary lisp code in your snippet templates, so you could do something like this:
# -*- mode: snippet -*-
# name: foobars
# key: fbf
# binding: direct-keybinding
# --
`(foo-bar-for-the-win)`
You'd need to ensure your function didn't return anything, or it would be inserted in the buffer. I don't use abbrev-mode, so I don't know if this would introduce conflicts. yas/snippet takes a bit of experimenting to get it running, but it's pretty handy once you get it set up.
Original answer:
You can bind space to any function you like. You could bind all of the punctuation keys to the same function, or to different functions.
(define-key your-mode-map " " 'your-choice-function)
You probably want to do this within a custom mode map, so you can return to normal behaviour when you switch modes. Globally setting space to anything but self-insert would be unhelpful.
Every abbrev is composed of several elements. Among the main elements are the name (e.g. "fbf"), the expansion (any string you like), and the hook (a function that gets called). In your case it sounds like you want the expansion to be the empty string and simply specify your foo-bar-for-the-win as the hook.

What's the best name for a non-mutating "add" method on an immutable collection? [closed]

Closed. This question is opinion-based. It is not currently accepting answers.
Closed 11 months ago.
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Sorry for the waffly title - if I could come up with a concise title, I wouldn't have to ask the question.
Suppose I have an immutable list type. It has an operation Foo(x) which returns a new immutable list with the specified argument as an extra element at the end. So to build up a list of strings with values "Hello", "immutable", "world" you could write:
var empty = new ImmutableList<string>();
var list1 = empty.Foo("Hello");
var list2 = list1.Foo("immutable");
var list3 = list2.Foo("word");
(This is C# code, and I'm most interested in a C# suggestion if you feel the language is important. It's not fundamentally a language question, but the idioms of the language may be important.)
The important thing is that the existing lists are not altered by Foo - so empty.Count would still return 0.
Another (more idiomatic) way of getting to the end result would be:
var list = new ImmutableList<string>().Foo("Hello")
.Foo("immutable")
.Foo("word");
My question is: what's the best name for Foo?
EDIT 3: As I reveal later on, the name of the type might not actually be ImmutableList<T>, which makes the position clear. Imagine instead that it's TestSuite and that it's immutable because the whole of the framework it's a part of is immutable...
(End of edit 3)
Options I've come up with so far:
Add: common in .NET, but implies mutation of the original list
Cons: I believe this is the normal name in functional languages, but meaningless to those without experience in such languages
Plus: my favourite so far, it doesn't imply mutation to me. Apparently this is also used in Haskell but with slightly different expectations (a Haskell programmer might expect it to add two lists together rather than adding a single value to the other list).
With: consistent with some other immutable conventions, but doesn't have quite the same "additionness" to it IMO.
And: not very descriptive.
Operator overload for + : I really don't like this much; I generally think operators should only be applied to lower level types. I'm willing to be persuaded though!
The criteria I'm using for choosing are:
Gives the correct impression of the result of the method call (i.e. that it's the original list with an extra element)
Makes it as clear as possible that it doesn't mutate the existing list
Sounds reasonable when chained together as in the second example above
Please ask for more details if I'm not making myself clear enough...
EDIT 1: Here's my reasoning for preferring Plus to Add. Consider these two lines of code:
list.Add(foo);
list.Plus(foo);
In my view (and this is a personal thing) the latter is clearly buggy - it's like writing "x + 5;" as a statement on its own. The first line looks like it's okay, until you remember that it's immutable. In fact, the way that the plus operator on its own doesn't mutate its operands is another reason why Plus is my favourite. Without the slight ickiness of operator overloading, it still gives the same connotations, which include (for me) not mutating the operands (or method target in this case).
EDIT 2: Reasons for not liking Add.
Various answers are effectively: "Go with Add. That's what DateTime does, and String has Replace methods etc which don't make the immutability obvious." I agree - there's precedence here. However, I've seen plenty of people call DateTime.Add or String.Replace and expect mutation. There are loads of newsgroup questions (and probably SO ones if I dig around) which are answered by "You're ignoring the return value of String.Replace; strings are immutable, a new string gets returned."
Now, I should reveal a subtlety to the question - the type might not actually be an immutable list, but a different immutable type. In particular, I'm working on a benchmarking framework where you add tests to a suite, and that creates a new suite. It might be obvious that:
var list = new ImmutableList<string>();
list.Add("foo");
isn't going to accomplish anything, but it becomes a lot murkier when you change it to:
var suite = new TestSuite<string, int>();
suite.Add(x => x.Length);
That looks like it should be okay. Whereas this, to me, makes the mistake clearer:
var suite = new TestSuite<string, int>();
suite.Plus(x => x.Length);
That's just begging to be:
var suite = new TestSuite<string, int>().Plus(x => x.Length);
Ideally, I would like my users not to have to be told that the test suite is immutable. I want them to fall into the pit of success. This may not be possible, but I'd like to try.
I apologise for over-simplifying the original question by talking only about an immutable list type. Not all collections are quite as self-descriptive as ImmutableList<T> :)
In situations like that, I usually go with Concat. That usually implies to me that a new object is being created.
var p = listA.Concat(listB);
var k = listA.Concat(item);
I'd go with Cons, for one simple reason: it means exactly what you want it to.
I'm a huge fan of saying exactly what I mean, especially in source code. A newbie will have to look up the definition of Cons only once, but then read and use that a thousand times. I find that, in the long term, it's nicer to work with systems that make the common case easier, even if the up-front cost is a little bit higher.
The fact that it would be "meaningless" to people with no FP experience is actually a big advantage. As you pointed out, all of the other words you found already have some meaning, and that meaning is either slightly different or ambiguous. A new concept should have a new word (or in this case, an old one). I'd rather somebody have to look up the definition of Cons, than to assume incorrectly he knows what Add does.
Other operations borrowed from functional languages often keep their original names, with no apparent catastrophes. I haven't seen any push to come up with synonyms for "map" and "reduce" that sound more familiar to non-FPers, nor do I see any benefit from doing so.
(Full disclosure: I'm a Lisp programmer, so I already know what Cons means.)
Actually I like And, especially in the idiomatic way. I'd especially like it if you had a static readonly property for the Empty list, and perhaps make the constructor private so you always have to build from the empty list.
var list = ImmutableList<string>.Empty.And("Hello")
.And("Immutable")
.And("Word");
Whenever I'm in a jam with nomenclature, I hit up the interwebs.
thesaurus.com returns this for "add":
Definition: adjoin, increase; make
further comment
Synonyms: affix,
annex, ante, append, augment, beef
up, boost, build up, charge up,
continue, cue in, figure in, flesh
out, heat up, hike, hike up, hitch on,
hook on, hook up with, include, jack
up, jazz up, join together, pad,
parlay, piggyback, plug into, pour it
on, reply, run up, say further, slap
on, snowball, soup up, speed up,
spike, step up, supplement, sweeten,
tack on, tag
I like the sound of Adjoin, or more simply Join. That is what you're doing, right? The method could also apply to joining other ImmutableList<>'s.
Personally, I like .With(). If I was using the object, after reading the documentation or the code comments, it would be clear what it does, and it reads ok in the source code.
object.With("My new item as well");
Or, you add "Along" with it.. :)
object.AlongWith("this new item");
I ended up going with Add for all of my Immutable Collections in BclExtras. The reason being is that it's an easy predictable name. I'm not worried so much about people confusing Add with a mutating add since the name of the type is prefixed with Immutable.
For awhile I considered Cons and other functional style names. Eventually I discounted them because they're not nearly as well known. Sure functional programmers will understand but they're not the majority of users.
Other Names: you mentioned:
Plus: I'm wishy/washing on this one. For me this doesn't distinguish it as being a non-mutating operation anymore than Add does
With: Will cause issues with VB (pun intended)
Operator overloading: Discoverability would be an issue
Options I considered:
Concat: String's are Immutable and use this. Unfortunately it's only really good for adding to the end
CopyAdd: Copy what? The source, the list?
AddToNewList: Maybe a good one for List. But what about a Collection, Stack, Queue, etc ...
Unfortunately there doesn't really seem to be a word that is
Definitely an immutable operation
Understandable to the majority of users
Representable in less than 4 words
It gets even more odd when you consider collections other than List. Take for instance Stack. Even first year programmers can tell you that Stacks have a Push/Pop pair of methods. If you create an ImmutableStack and give it a completely different name, lets call it Foo/Fop, you've just added more work for them to use your collection.
Edit: Response to Plus Edit
I see where you're going with Plus. I think a stronger case would actually be Minus for remove. If I saw the following I would certainly wonder what in the world the programmer was thinking
list.Minus(obj);
The biggest problem I have with Plus/Minus or a new pairing is it feels like overkill. The collection itself already has a distinguishing name, the Immutable prefix. Why go further by adding vocabulary whose intent is to add the same distinction as the Immutable prefix already did.
I can see the call site argument. It makes it clearer from the standpoint of a single expression. But in the context of the entire function it seems unnecessary.
Edit 2
Agree that people have definitely been confused by String.Concat and DateTime.Add. I've seen several very bright programmers hit this problem.
However I think ImmutableList is a different argument. There is nothing about String or DateTime that establishes it as Immutable to a programmer. You must simply know that it's immutable via some other source. So the confusion is not unexpected.
ImmutableList does not have that problem because the name defines it's behavior. You could argue that people don't know what Immutable is and I think that's also valid. I certainly didn't know it till about year 2 in college. But you have the same issue with whatever name you choose instead of Add.
Edit 3: What about types like TestSuite which are immutable but do not contain the word?
I think this drives home the idea that you shouldn't be inventing new method names. Namely because there is clearly a drive to make types immutable in order to facilitate parallel operations. If you focus on changing the name of methods for collections, the next step will be the mutating method names on every type you use that is immutable.
I think it would be a more valuable effort to instead focus on making types identifiable as Immutable. That way you can solve the problem without rethinking every mutating method pattern out there.
Now how can you identify TestSuite as Immutable? In todays environment I think there are a few ways
Prefix with Immutable: ImmutableTestSuite
Add an Attribute which describes the level of Immutablitiy. This is certainly less discoverable
Not much else.
My guess/hope is development tools will start helping this problem by making it easy to identify immutable types simply by sight (different color, stronger font, etc ...). But I think that's the answer though over changing all of the method names.
I think this may be one of those rare situations where it's acceptable to overload the + operator. In math terminology, we know that + doesn't append something to the end of something else. It always combines two values together and returns a new resulting value.
For example, it's intuitively obvious that when you say
x = 2 + 2;
the resulting value of x is 4, not 22.
Similarly,
var empty = new ImmutableList<string>();
var list1 = empty + "Hello";
var list2 = list1 + "immutable";
var list3 = list2 + "word";
should make clear what each variable is going to hold. It should be clear that list2 is not changed in the last line, but instead that list3 is assigned the result of appending "word" to list2.
Otherwise, I would just name the function Plus().
To be as clear as possible, you might want to go with the wordier CopyAndAdd, or something similar.
I would call it Extend() or maybe ExtendWith() if you feel like really verbose.
Extends means adding something to something else without changing it. I think this is very relevant terminology in C# since this is similar to the concept of extension methods - they "add" a new method to a class without "touching" the class itself.
Otherwise, if you really want to emphasize that you don't modify the original object at all, using some prefix like Get- looks like unavoidable to me.
Added(), Appended()
I like to use the past tense for operations on immutable objects. It conveys the idea that you aren't changing the original object, and it's easy to recognize when you see it.
Also, because mutating method names are often present-tense verbs, it applies to most of the immutable-method-name-needed cases you run into. For example an immutable stack has the methods "pushed" and "popped".
I like mmyers suggestion of CopyAndAdd. In keeping with a "mutation" theme, maybe you could go with Bud (asexual reproduction), Grow, Replicate, or Evolve? =)
EDIT: To continue with my genetic theme, how about Procreate, implying that a new object is made which is based on the previous one, but with something new added.
This is probably a stretch, but in Ruby there is a commonly used notation for the distinction: add doesn't mutate; add! mutates. If this is an pervasive problem in your project, you could do that too (not necessarily with non-alphabetic characters, but consistently using a notation to indicate mutating/non-mutating methods).
Join seems appropriate.
Maybe the confusion stems from the fact that you want two operations in one. Why not separate them? DSL style:
var list = new ImmutableList<string>("Hello");
var list2 = list.Copy().With("World!");
Copy would return an intermediate object, that's a mutable copy of the original list. With would return a new immutable list.
Update:
But, having an intermediate, mutable collection around is not a good approach. The intermediate object should be contained in the Copy operation:
var list1 = new ImmutableList<string>("Hello");
var list2 = list1.Copy(list => list.Add("World!"));
Now, the Copy operation takes a delegate, which receives a mutable list, so that it can control the copy outcome. It can do much more than appending an element, like removing elements or sorting the list. It can also be used in the ImmutableList constructor to assemble the initial list without intermediary immutable lists.
public ImmutableList<T> Copy(Action<IList<T>> mutate) {
if (mutate == null) return this;
var list = new List<T>(this);
mutate(list);
return new ImmutableList<T>(list);
}
Now there's no possibility of misinterpretation by the users, they will naturally fall into the pit of success.
Yet another update:
If you still don't like the mutable list mention, even now that it's contained, you can design a specification object, that will specify, or script, how the copy operation will transform its list. The usage will be the same:
var list1 = new ImmutableList<string>("Hello");
// rules is a specification object, that takes commands to run in the copied collection
var list2 = list1.Copy(rules => rules.Append("World!"));
Now you can be creative with the rules names and you can only expose the functionality that you want Copy to support, not the entire capabilities of an IList.
For the chaining usage, you can create a reasonable constructor (which will not use chaining, of course):
public ImmutableList(params T[] elements) ...
...
var list = new ImmutableList<string>("Hello", "immutable", "World");
Or use the same delegate in another constructor:
var list = new ImmutableList<string>(rules =>
rules
.Append("Hello")
.Append("immutable")
.Append("World")
);
This assumes that the rules.Append method returns this.
This is what it would look like with your latest example:
var suite = new TestSuite<string, int>(x => x.Length);
var otherSuite = suite.Copy(rules =>
rules
.Append(x => Int32.Parse(x))
.Append(x => x.GetHashCode())
);
A few random thoughts:
ImmutableAdd()
Append()
ImmutableList<T>(ImmutableList<T> originalList, T newItem) Constructor
DateTime in C# uses Add. So why not use the same name? As long the users of your class understand the class is immutable.
I think the key thing you're trying to get at that's hard to express is the nonpermutation, so maybe something with a generative word in it, something like CopyWith() or InstancePlus().
I don't think the English language will let you imply immutability in an unmistakable way while using a verb that means the same thing as "Add". "Plus" almost does it, but people can still make the mistake.
The only way you're going to prevent your users from mistaking the object for something mutable is by making it explicit, either through the name of the object itself or through the name of the method (as with the verbose options like "GetCopyWith" or "CopyAndAdd").
So just go with your favourite, "Plus."
First, an interesting starting point:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naming_conventions_(programming) ...In particular, check the "See Also" links at the bottom.
I'm in favor of either Plus or And, effectively equally.
Plus and And are both math-based in etymology. As such, both connote mathematical operation; both yield an expression which reads naturally as expressions which may resolve into a value, which fits with the method having a return value. And bears additional logic connotation, but both words apply intuitively to lists. Add connotes action performed on an object, which conflicts with the method's immutable semantics.
Both are short, which is especially important given the primitiveness of the operation. Simple, frequently-performed operations deserve shorter names.
Expressing immutable semantics is something I prefer to do via context. That is, I'd rather simply imply that this entire block of code has a functional feel; assume everything is immutable. That might just be me, however. I prefer immutability to be the rule; if it's done, it's done a lot in the same place; mutability is the exception.
How about Chain() or Attach()?
I prefer Plus (and Minus). They are easily understandable and map directly to operations involving well known immutable types (the numbers). 2+2 doesn't change the value of 2, it returns a new, equally immutable, value.
Some other possibilities:
Splice()
Graft()
Accrete()
How about mate, mateWith, or coitus, for those who abide. In terms of reproducing mammals are generally considered immutable.
Going to throw Union out there too. Borrowed from SQL.
Apparently I'm the first Obj-C/Cocoa person to answer this question.
NNString *empty = [[NSString alloc] init];
NSString *list1 = [empty stringByAppendingString:#"Hello"];
NSString *list2 = [list1 stringByAppendingString:#"immutable"];
NSString *list3 = [list2 stringByAppendingString:#"word"];
Not going to win any code golf games with this.
I think "Add" or "Plus" sounds fine. The name of the list itself should be enough to convey the list's immutability.
Maybe there are some words which remember me more of making a copy and add stuff to that instead of mutating the instance (like "Concatenate"). But i think having some symmetry for those words for other actions would be good to have too. I don't know of a similar word for "Remove" that i think of the same kind like "Concatenate". "Plus" sounds little strange to me. I wouldn't expect it being used in a non-numerical context. But that could aswell come from my non-english background.
Maybe i would use this scheme
AddToCopy
RemoveFromCopy
InsertIntoCopy
These have their own problems though, when i think about it. One could think they remove something or add something to an argument given. Not sure about it at all. Those words do not play nice in chaining either, i think. Too wordy to type.
Maybe i would just use plain "Add" and friends too. I like how it is used in math
Add 1 to 2 and you get 3
Well, certainly, a 2 remains a 2 and you get a new number. This is about two numbers and not about a list and an element, but i think it has some analogy. In my opinion, add does not necessarily mean you mutate something. I certainly see your point that having a lonely statement containing just an add and not using the returned new object does not look buggy. But I've now also thought some time about that idea of using another name than "add" but i just can't come up with another name, without making me think "hmm, i would need to look at the documentation to know what it is about" because its name differs from what I would expect to be called "add". Just some weird thought about this from litb, not sure it makes sense at all :)
Looking at http://thesaurus.reference.com/browse/add and http://thesaurus.reference.com/browse/plus I found gain and affix but I'm not sure how much they imply non-mutation.
I think that Plus() and Minus() or, alternatively, Including(), Excluding() are reasonable at implying immutable behavior.
However, no naming choice will ever make it perfectly clear to everyone, so I personally believe that a good xml doc comment would go a very long way here. VS throws these right in your face when you write code in the IDE - they're hard to ignore.
Append - because, note that names of the System.String methods suggest that they mutate the instance, but they don't.
Or I quite like AfterAppending:
void test()
{
Bar bar = new Bar();
List list = bar.AfterAppending("foo");
}
list.CopyWith(element)
As does Smalltalk :)
And also list.copyWithout(element) that removes all occurrences of an element, which is most useful when used as list.copyWithout(null) to remove unset elements.
I would go for Add, because I can see the benefit of a better name, but the problem would be to find different names for every other immutable operation which might make the class quite unfamiliar if that makes sense.

Are hard-coded STRINGS ever acceptable?

Similar to Is hard-coding literals ever acceptable?, but I'm specifically thinking of "magic strings" here.
On a large project, we have a table of configuration options like these:
Name Value
---- -----
FOO_ENABLED Y
BAR_ENABLED N
...
(Hundreds of them).
The common practice is to call a generic function to test an option like this:
if (config_options.value('FOO_ENABLED') == 'Y') ...
(Of course, this same option may need to be checked in many places in the system code.)
When adding a new option, I was considering adding a function to hide the "magic string" like this:
if (config_options.foo_enabled()) ...
However, colleagues thought I'd gone overboard and objected to doing this, preferring the hard-coding because:
That's what we normally do
It makes it easier to see what's going on when debugging the code
The trouble is, I can see their point! Realistically, we are never going to rename the options for any reason, so about the only advantage I can think of for my function is that the compiler would catch any typo like fo_enabled(), but not 'FO_ENABLED'.
What do you think? Have I missed any other advantages/disadvantages?
If I use a string once in the code, I don't generally worry about making it a constant somewhere.
If I use a string twice in the code, I'll consider making it a constant.
If I use a string three times in the code, I'll almost certainly make it a constant.
if (config_options.isTrue('FOO_ENABLED')) {...
}
Restrict your hard coded Y check to one place, even if it means writing a wrapper class for your Map.
if (config_options.isFooEnabled()) {...
}
Might seem okay until you have 100 configuration options and 100 methods (so here you can make a judgement about future application growth and needs before deciding on your implementation). Otherwise it is better to have a class of static strings for parameter names.
if (config_options.isTrue(ConfigKeys.FOO_ENABLED)) {...
}
I realise the question is old, but it came up on my margin.
AFAIC, the issue here has not been identified accurately, either in the question, or the answers. Forget about 'harcoding strings" or not, for a moment.
The database has a Reference table, containing config_options. The PK is a string.
There are two types of PKs:
Meaningful Identifiers, that the users (and developers) see and use. These PKs are supposed to be stable, they can be relied upon.
Meaningless Id columns which the users should never see, that the developers have to be aware of, and code around. These cannot be relied upon.
It is ordinary, normal, to write code using the absolute value of a meaningful PK IF CustomerCode = "IBM" ... or IF CountryCode = "AUS" etc.
referencing the absolute value of a meaningless PK is not acceptable (due to auto-increment; gaps being changed; values being replaced wholesale).
.
Your reference table uses meaningful PKs. Referencing those literal strings in code is unavoidable. Hiding the value will make maintenance more difficult; the code is no longer literal; your colleagues are right. Plus there is the additional redundant function that chews cycles. If there is a typo in the literal, you will soon find that out during Dev testing, long before UAT.
hundreds of functions for hundreds of literals is absurd. If you do implement a function, then Normalise your code, and provide a single function that can be used for any of the hundreds of literals. In which case, we are back to a naked literal, and the function can be dispensed with.
the point is, the attempt to hide the literal has no value.
.
It cannot be construed as "hardcoding", that is something quite different. I think that is where your issue is, identifying these constructs as "hardcoded". It is just referencing a Meaningfull PK literally.
Now from the perspective of any code segment only, if you use the same value a few times, you can improve the code by capturing the literal string in a variable, and then using the variable in the rest of the code block. Certainly not a function. But that is an efficiency and good practice issue. Even that does not change the effect IF CountryCode = #cc_aus
I really should use constants and no hard coded literals.
You can say they won't be changed, but you may never know. And it is best to make it a habit. To use symbolic constants.
In my experience, this kind of issue is masking a deeper problem: failure to do actual OOP and to follow the DRY principle.
In a nutshell, capture the decision at startup time by an appropriate definition for each action inside the if statements, and then throw away both the config_options and the run-time tests.
Details below.
The sample usage was:
if (config_options.value('FOO_ENABLED') == 'Y') ...
which raises the obvious question, "What's going on in the ellipsis?", especially given the following statement:
(Of course, this same option may need to be checked in many places in the system code.)
Let's assume that each of these config_option values really does correspond to a single problem domain (or implementation strategy) concept.
Instead of doing this (repeatedly, in various places throughout the code):
Take a string (tag),
Find its corresponding other string (value),
Test that value as a boolean-equivalent,
Based on that test, decide whether to perform some action.
I suggest encapsulating the concept of a "configurable action".
Let's take as an example (obviously just as hypthetical as FOO_ENABLED ... ;-) that your code has to work in either English units or metric units. If METRIC_ENABLED is "true", convert user-entered data from metric to English for internal computation, and convert back prior to displaying results.
Define an interface:
public interface MetricConverter {
double toInches(double length);
double toCentimeters(double length);
double toPounds(double weight);
double toKilograms(double weight);
}
which identifies in one place all the behavior associated with the concept of METRIC_ENABLED.
Then write concrete implementations of all the ways those behaviors are to be carried out:
public class NullConv implements MetricConverter {
double toInches(double length) {return length;}
double toCentimeters(double length) {return length;}
double toPounds(double weight) {return weight;}
double toKilograms(double weight) {return weight;}
}
and
// lame implementation, just for illustration!!!!
public class MetricConv implements MetricConverter {
public static final double LBS_PER_KG = 2.2D;
public static final double CM_PER_IN = 2.54D
double toInches(double length) {return length * CM_PER_IN;}
double toCentimeters(double length) {return length / CM_PER_IN;}
double toPounds(double weight) {return weight * LBS_PER_KG;}
double toKilograms(double weight) {return weight / LBS_PER_KG;}
}
At startup time, instead of loading a bunch of config_options values, initialize a set of configurable actions, as in:
MetricConverter converter = (metricOption()) ? new MetricConv() : new NullConv();
(where the expression metricOption() above is a stand-in for whatever one-time-only check you need to make, including looking at the value of METRIC_ENABLED ;-)
Then, wherever the code would have said:
double length = getLengthFromGui();
if (config_options.value('METRIC_ENABLED') == 'Y') {
length = length / 2.54D;
}
// do some computation to produce result
// ...
if (config_options.value('METRIC_ENABLED') == 'Y') {
result = result * 2.54D;
}
displayResultingLengthOnGui(result);
rewrite it as:
double length = converter.toInches(getLengthFromGui());
// do some computation to produce result
// ...
displayResultingLengthOnGui(converter.toCentimeters(result));
Because all of the implementation details related to that one concept are now packaged cleanly, all future maintenance related to METRIC_ENABLED can be done in one place. In addition, the run-time trade-off is a win; the "overhead" of invoking a method is trivial compared with the overhead of fetching a String value from a Map and performing String#equals.
I believe that the two reasons you have mentioned, Possible misspelling in string, that cannot be detected until run time and the possibility (although slim) of a name change would justify your idea.
On top of that you can get typed functions, now it seems you only store booleans, what if you need to store an int, a string etc. I would rather use get_foo() with a type, than get_string("FOO") or get_int("FOO").
I think there are two different issues here:
In the current project, the convention of using hard-coded strings is already well established, so all the developers working on the project are familiar with it. It might be a sub-optimal convention for all the reasons that have been listed, but everybody familiar with the code can look at it and instinctively knows what the code is supposed to do. Changing the code so that in certain parts, it uses the "new" functionality will make the code slightly harder to read (because people will have to think and remember what the new convention does) and thus a little harder to maintain. But I would guess that changing over the whole project to the new convention would potentially be prohibitively expensive unless you can quickly script the conversion.
On a new project, symbolic constants are the way IMO, for all the reasons listed. Especially because anything that makes the compiler catch errors at compile time that would otherwise be caught by a human at run time is a very useful convention to establish.
Another thing to consider is intent. If you are on a project that requires localization hard coded strings can be ambiguous. Consider the following:
const string HELLO_WORLD = "Hello world!";
print(HELLO_WORLD);
The programmer's intent is clear. Using a constant implies that this string does not need to be localized. Now look at this example:
print("Hello world!");
Here we aren't so sure. Did the programmer really not want this string to be localized or did the programmer forget about localization while he was writing this code?
I too prefer a strongly-typed configuration class if it is used through-out the code. With properly named methods you don't lose any readability. If you need to do conversions from strings to another data type (decimal/float/int), you don't need to repeat the code that does the conversion in multiple places and can cache the result so the conversion only takes place once. You've already got the basis of this in place already so I don't think it would take much to get used to the new way of doing things.