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1 point by conanite 5627 days ago | link | parent

Aha, I am enlightened, that explains why 'map doesn't complain.

It's still a mystery (to me) how ac manages to substitute unquote b because it's not a proper unquote. At some point, the x in

  (map (lambda (x) (ac-qq1 level x env)) x))
will be bound to the symbol 'unquote, so the compiler should never see (unquote b) ...

clearly, the only logical explanation is magic :)



2 points by rntz 5627 days ago | link

The answer is that arc quasiquotation gets compiles down to scheme quasiquotation, and mzscheme's quasiquote handler understands (... unquote bar) to be equivalent to (... (unquote-splicing bar)). Since the arc compiler doesn't understand unquotes of this style, you'll only get the correct results when the expression unquoted is the same in arc and scheme - ie: it's either a literal, or it's a local variable. For example:

    ; this works because the local 'x in arc is compiled to 'x in scheme as well
    arc> (let x 0 `(a . ,x))
    (a . 0)
    ; this works because '+ in scheme adds numbers just as in arc
    arc> (let x 0 `(a . ,(+ x 1)))
    (a . 1)
    ; the following examples do not work
    arc> (let x '(b) `(a . ,(join x '(c))))
    Error: "reference to undefined identifier: join"
    arc> (let x '(b) `(a . ,(+ x '(c))))
    Error: "+: expects type <number> as 1st argument, given: (b . nil); other arguments were: (c)"
    arc> (= x '(b))
    (b)
    arc> `(a . ,x)
    Error: "reference to undefined identifier: x"
It's funny how a surface bug turns out to lead to something deeper in this way. I feel like Alice down the rabbit hole.

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