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#40671
[DOC] modify literal objects
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On 17.05.2020 04:28, Paul Eggert wrote:
> On 5/11/20 6:59 PM, Dmitry Gutov wrote:
>
>> I think that's exactly what a "constraint" means: something that is enforced.
>
> Not necessarily. In some software systems constraints are not enforced. (Use
> Google to search for "unenforced constraints", which can be quite the thing in
> the database world.) But I am straying from the documentation issue.
An existence of a technical term doesn't really cancel out the regular
meaning of the word.
>> The symbol-name example? I'm not sure it's really important to
>> warn about this one in particular.
>
> OK, but then you also write:
>
>> When one tries to
>> describe "unsafe" things to do, they don't just give a few examples, they
>> usually try to cover all cases.
>
> ... and symbol-name is one of the cases.
These are just two distinct points:
1. You seem to be trying to redefine the term "motable" as a way to
avoid enumerating all possible cases. But since the meaning of the term
is different from how it is understood in the English language, it
should at least have a proper definition. But the said definition would
have to cover the possible cases too.
2. symbol-name seems like something we don't have to explain specially.
So if that's the only counter-example to "values that appear in
expressions", or whichever phrase we chose, then we could as well just
on the phrase and dispense with additional complications. Which would
also make having a redefinition of the term "mutable" less relevant.
> As far as the bigger project (cover all the cases) goes, I don't know how
> feasible that would be. I suppose someone could take that on as a further task.
> In the attached patch I did add one more example, of calling the copy-sequence
> function, but there would be lots more examples where that came from.
>
>> Inventing a name for such values doesn't help if the user doesn't have enough
>> knowledge to avoid all members of this set. Or is "part of an expression that is
>> evaluated" after all the test we'll be teaching?
>
> No, it's not the only way that something can be a constant. This is why the
> (symbol-name 'cons) example is relevant: it yields a string that has never been
> "part of an expression that is evaluated".
There's an argument to be made that the name of the symbol 'cons is part
of any expression or program that uses `cons'.
>> By the way, I have read last two paragraphs of that section now. C and
>> "constants" are still there.
>
> It's appropriate to talk about constants in the footnote that mentions languages
> that have constants. And the footnote is helpful, because it documents the core
> issue that prompted this long thread: different languages/traditions mean
> different things by the word "constant" and/or "immutable", and the footnote
> makes it clear that the documentation's "objects that should not be changed"
> follows the Common Lisp / C tradition, not the Python / JavaScript tradition.
>
> That being said, it'd be helpful if the footnote mentions both "constants" and
> "immutable objects" if only to remind readers of relevant buzzwords. So I did
> that in the attached patch.
I like that change, thank you.
>> I'm curious to see the discussion about actually making this error at runtime in
>> one of the next Emacs version.
>
> Me too. That's for a later thread, one that I'd like to get rolling instead of
> worrying about the minor details in the current doc. To help get things rolling
> I installed the patch that I proposed earlier, followed by the attached minor
> patch that attempt to address the abovementioned issues. I plan to look at
> improving the runtime checking next.
OK, thank you.
My intuition, though, that making cases like the one you just changed in
emacs-lisp-mode-tests.el blow up at runtime will create a massive
backward incompatibility.
This bug report was last modified 5 years and 2 days ago.
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