Shallow Binding in LISP 1.5
Author(s)
Baker, Henry G. Jr.
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Shallow binding is a scheme which allows the value of a variable to be accessed in a bounded amount of computation. An elegant model for shallow binding in LISP 1.5 is presented in which context-switching is an environment structure transformation called "re-rooting". Re-rooting is completely general and reversible, and is optional in the sense that a LISP 1.5 interpreter will operate correctly whether or not re-rooting is invoked on every context change. Since re-rooting leaves (ASSOC X A) invariant, for all variables X and all environments A, the programmer can have access to a re-rooting primitive, (SHALLOW), which gives him dynamic control over whether accesses are shallow or deep, and which effects only the speed of execution of a program, not its semantics. So long as re-rooting is an indivisible operation, multiple processes can be active in the same environment structure. The re-rooting scheme is compared to a cache scheme for shallow binding and the two are found to be compatible. Finally, the concept of re-rooting is shown not to depend upon LISP's choice of dynamic instead of lexical binding for free variables; hence it can be used in an Algol interpreter, for example.
Description
Key Words and Phrases: LISP 1.5, environment structures, FUNARGs, shallow and deep binding, multiprogramming, cache.
CR Categories: 4.13, 4.22, 4.32
This report describes research done at the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Support for the laboratory's artificial intelligence research is provided in part by the Advanced Research Projects Agency of the Department of Defense under Office of Naval Research contract N00014-75-C-0522.
Date issued
1977-01Publisher
MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
Series/Report no.
MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory Working Papers, WP-138;
Keywords
cache, multiprogramming, shallow and deep binding, FUNARGs, environment structures, LISP 1.5