/usr/share/gnu-smalltalk/examples/Gen3.st is in gnu-smalltalk-common 3.2.4-2.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
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|
| Python-like Generators
|
|
======================================================================"
"======================================================================
|
| Copyright 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
| Written by Paolo Bonzini.
|
| This file is part of GNU Smalltalk.
|
| GNU Smalltalk is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
| under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
| Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version.
|
| GNU Smalltalk is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
| ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
| FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more
| details.
|
| You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
| GNU Smalltalk; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software
| Foundation, 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
|
======================================================================"
Stream subclass: #Generator
instanceVariableNames: 'next producer consumer process atEnd'
classVariableNames: ''
poolDictionaries: ''
category: 'Streams-Generators'
!
Generator comment:
'A Generator object provides a way to use blocks to define a Stream
of many return values. The return values are computed one at a time,
as needed, and hence need not even be finite.
A generator block is converted to a Generator with "Generator
on: [...]". The Generator itself is passed to the block,
and as soon as a message like #next, #peek, #atEnd or #peekFor: is
sent to the generator, execution of the block starts/resumes and
goes on until the generator''s #yield: method is called: then the
argument of #yield: will be the Generator''s next element. If the
block goes on to the end without calling #yield:, the Generator
will produce no more elements and #atEnd will return true.
You could achieve the effect of generators manually by writing your
own class and storing all the local variables of the generator as
instance variables. For example, returning a list of integers could
be done by setting a variable to 0, and having the #next method
increment it and return it. However, for a moderately complicated
generator, writing a corresponding class would be much messier (and
might lead to code duplication or inefficiency if you want to support
#peek, #peekFor: and/or #atEnd): in general, providing a #do:-like
interface is easy, but not providing a Stream-like one (think binary
trees).
The idea of generators comes from other programming languages, in
particular this interface looks much like Scheme streams and Python
generators. But Python in turn mutuated the idea for example from
Icon, where the idea of generators is central. In Icon, every
expression and function call behaves like a generator, and if a
statement manages scalars, it automatically uses up all the results
that the corresponding generator provides; on the other hand, Icon
does not represent generators as first-class objects like Python and
Smalltalk do.'!
!Generator class methodsFor: 'instance creation'!
on: aBlock
"Return a generator, and also suspend the execution of the
sender by returning the new generator to the method that
invoked the sender. More easily seen by looking at an
example:
Integer>>evenNumbersUpTo: n
^Generator on: [ :gen |
self to: n do: [ :each |
each even ifTrue: [ gen yield: each ]
]
]
Although there is no return statement in the method, evaluating
it returns a Generator for the even numbers between the receiver
and the argument."
^self new
forkOn: aBlock;
yourself
! !
!Generator methodsFor: 'stream protocol'!
atEnd
"Answer whether more data can be generated."
atEnd isNil ifTrue: [ self generateNext ].
^atEnd
!
next
"Evaluate the generator until it generates the next value or
decides that nothing else can be generated."
| result |
self atEnd ifTrue: [ ^self pastEnd ].
atEnd := nil.
result := next.
next := nil.
^result
!
peek
"Evaluate the generator until it generates the next value or
decides that nothing else can be generated, and save the value
so that #peek or #next will return it again."
self atEnd ifTrue: [ ^nil ].
^next
!
peekFor: anObject
"Evaluate the generator until it generates the next value or
decides that nothing else can be generated, and if it is not equal
to anObject, save the value so that #peek or #next will return it
again."
self atEnd ifTrue: [ self pastEnd. ^false ].
^next = anObject
ifTrue: [ next := nil. atEnd := nil. true ]
ifFalse: [ false ]
! !
!Generator methodsFor: 'private - continuations'!
forkOn: aBlock
producer := Semaphore new.
consumer := Semaphore new.
process := [
producer wait.
aBlock value: self.
consumer signal
] fork!
yield: anObject
"Save the object returned by the block in the next
instance variable, then restart the consumer thread
and put our own to wait."
next := anObject.
atEnd := false.
consumer signal.
producer wait!
generateNext
"Restart the producer thread and put our own to wait."
atEnd := true.
process priority = Processor activePriority
ifFalse: [ process priority: Processor activePriority ].
producer signal.
consumer wait! !
!Integer methodsFor: 'examples of generators'!
generatorForGeneratorExample
^Generator on: [ :gen |
'Entering gen' displayNl.
1 to: self do: [ :each |
('Yielding ', each printString, '... ') display.
gen yield: each.
'Resuming gen' displayNl
] ]!
generatorExample: gen
| n |
('Running on ', gen printString) displayNl.
[
'Calling next... ' display.
n := gen next.
n notNil
] whileTrue: [
('Got ', n printString) displayNl
]! !
Eval [
Smalltalk byteCodeCounter printNl.
10 generatorExample: 10 generatorForGeneratorExample.
Smalltalk byteCodeCounter printNl
]
|