Re: [colorforth] explicit vs. implicit
- Subject: Re: [colorforth] explicit vs. implicit
- From: Mark Slicker <maslicke@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2004 11:49:50 -0400 (EDT)
On Wed, 18 Aug 2004, stephen white wrote:
> On 18/08/2004, at 4:23 AM, Mark Slicker wrote:
> > + * dup +
> >
> > I get:
> >
> > ____+_____
> > / \
> > * *
> > / \ / \
> > x + x +
> > / \ / \
> > y z y z
>
> Aren't you only DUP'ing the result so far?
>
> If you DUP then change the value of z before +'ing, you would get the
> same result as it's not really two trees being evaluated...
>
Yes, real Forth implementations will conserve the computation of the
first tree. Also + and * will immediately compute the result of the
two items on the top of the stack, rather than construct a tree node with
two leaf elements.
Looking at the computation this way, I would hope to see that Lisp and
Forth are really two sides of the same the coin. Then a comparison can
readily be made between language features and implementation choices.
Mark
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