content/blog/2018/07/fun-with-macros-if-let.markdown @ 3afa83528189

Try to unfuck the CSS
author Steve Losh <steve@stevelosh.com>
date Sat, 21 Jul 2018 17:41:10 +0000
parents 0ad7006a154b
children f5556130bda1
+++
title = "Fun with Macros: If-Let and When-Let"
snip = "Part 2 in a series of short posts about fun Common Lisp Macros."
date = 2018-07-09T16:00:00Z
draft = false

+++

I haven't been writing much lately because I've been in the process of switching
my life over to Linux from OS X.  I finally managed to get my blog
infrastructure running again, so let's take a look at some deceptively-tricky
Common Lisp macros: `when-let` and `if-let` (and their `let*` counterparts).

<div id="toc"></div>

## Introduction

I first heard of the [`when-let`][clojure-when-let] and
[`if-let`][clojure-if-let] macros when I learned Clojure a few years ago.
They're used like `let` to bind values to variables, but if a value is `nil`
then `when-let` will return `nil` without running the body, and `if-let` will
execute its alternative branch.

Let's implement them in Common Lisp.  Once we're done writing them we'll use
them like this:

[clojure-if-let]: https://clojuredocs.org/clojure.core/if-let
[clojure-when-let]: https://clojuredocs.org/clojure.core/when-let

```lisp
(when-let ((name 'steve))
  (format t "Hello, ~A" name))

; => Hello, STEVE

(when-let ((name nil))
  (format t "Hello, ~A" name))

; => Nothing printed, nil returned

(if-let ((name nil))
  (format t "Hello, ~A" name)
  (format t "Hello, unnamed person!"))

; => Hello, unnamed person!
```

## A First Attempt

A simple first attempt at writing `when-let` might look something like this:

```lisp
(defmacro when-let (binding &body body)
  "Bind `binding` and execute `body`, short-circuiting on `nil`.

  This macro combines `when` and `let`.  It takes a binding and binds
  it like `let` before executing `body`, but if the binding's value
  evaluates to `nil`, then `nil` is returned.

  Examples:

    (when-let ((a 1))
      (list a))
    ; =>
    (1)

    (when-let ((a nil))
      (list a))
    ; =>
    NIL

  "
  (destructuring-bind ((symbol value)) binding
    `(let ((,symbol ,value))
       (when ,symbol
         ,@body))))
```

A first attempt at `if-let` looks similar:

```lisp
(defmacro if-let (binding then else)
  "Bind `binding` and execute `then` if true, or `else` otherwise.

  This macro combines `if` and `let`.  It takes a binding and binds
  it like `let` before executing `then`, but if the binding's value
  evaluates to `nil` the `else` branch is executed (with no binding
  in effect).

  Examples:

    (if-let ((a 1))
      (list a)
      'nope)
    ; =>
    (1)

    (if-let ((a nil))
      (list a)
      'nope)
    ; =>
    NOPE

  "
  (destructuring-bind ((symbol value)) binding
    `(let ((,symbol ,value))
       (if ,symbol
         ,then
         ,else))))
```

This is a decent attempt at a first pass, but already there are a couple of
things to note.

First: we have documentation, with examples!  The docstrings are longer than the
macros themselves, and *this is fine*!  I always prefer to err on the side of
being more clear than saving space.  If you're a little more verbose than
necessary some experts might have to flick their scroll wheels, but if you're
too terse you can leave someone wallowing in confusion.  Experts should know how
to skim documentation quickly if they're really experts, so help out the newer
people and be clear!

I didn't make the `else` branch optional like it is in Common Lisp's `if`
because one-armed `if`s are a stylistic abomination.

We could have added some `check-type` statements to make sure the `symbol` is
*actually* a symbol, but since it's getting compiled to a `let` the error will
be caught there immediately anyway.

## Multiple Bindings

Our first attempt works, but only supports a single binding.  Clojure's versions
of these macros quit here, but we can do better.  Let's make our macros support
multiple bindings.  First we'll upgrade `when-let`:

```lisp
(defmacro when-let (bindings &body body)
  "Bind `bindings` and execute `body`, short-circuiting on `nil`.

  This macro combines `when` and `let`.  It takes a list of bindings
  and binds them like `let` before executing `body`, but if any
  binding's value evaluates to `nil`, then `nil` is returned.

  Examples:

    (when-let ((a 1)
               (b 2))
      (list a b))
    ; =>
    (1 2)

    (when-let ((a nil)
               (b 2))
      (list a b))
    ; =>
    NIL

  "
  (let ((symbols (mapcar #'first bindings)))
    `(let ,bindings
       (when (and ,@symbols)
         ,@body))))
```

And now `if-let`:

```lisp
(defmacro if-let (bindings then else)
  "Bind `bindings` and execute `then` if all are true, or `else` otherwise.

  This macro combines `if` and `let`.  It takes a list of bindings and
  binds them like `let` before executing `then`, but if any binding's
  value evaluates to `nil` the `else` branch is executed (with no
  bindings in effect).

  Examples:

    (if-let ((a 1)
             (b 2))
      (list a b)
      'nope)
    ; =>
    (1 2)

    (if-let ((a nil)
             (b 2))
      (list a b)
      'nope)
    ; =>
    NOPE

  "
  (let ((symbols (mapcar #'first bindings)))
    `(let ,bindings
       (if (and ,@symbols)
         ,then
         ,else))))
```

Note how we've updated the docstrings to be clear about the new behavior: if
*any* binding is `nil`, the alternate case takes over.

We've also updated the parameter names to be `bindings` (plural).  One thing
I love about Common Lisp is that it's a Lisp 2, so you can almost always use
nice names for function parameters instead of mangling them to avoid shadowing
functions (e.g. `(defun filter (function list) ...)` instead of `(defun filter
(fn lst) ...)`).  Take advantage of this and give your parameters descriptive,
pronounceable names.  You'll thank yourself every time your editor shows you the
arglist.

If you've read other blog posts about implementing these macros, this is where
they probably stopped.  But let's keep going, there's still much more to dig
into!

## Adding Some Stars

Now that we've got `if-let` and `when-let`, the obvious next step is to add
`if-let*` and `when-let*`.  We could do this by changing the `let` each macro
emits to a `let*`, but before we rush ahead let's think about how people will
use these macros to see if that change would make sense.

The point of using a `let*` instead of a `let` is so that later variables can
refer back to earlier ones:

```lisp
(let* ((name (read-string))
       (length (length name)))
  ; ...
  )
```

The point of using our `when-` and `if-` variants is to short-circuit and escape
on `nil`.  With the way our macros are currently written, *all* the variables
get bound before they *all* get checked for `nil` in the `and`.  This works for
the `-let` variants but isn't ideal for the new `-let*` variants.  If we're
using `when-let*` it would be nice if the later variables could assume the
earlier ones are non-`nil`.

This means we'll want to bail out *immediately* after the first `nil` value is
detected.  This is a little bit trickier than what we've currently got.  There
are a number of ways we could do it, but I'll save us from hitting a dead-end
rabbit hole later and implement `when-let*` like this:

```lisp
(defmacro when-let* (bindings &body body)
  "Bind `bindings` serially and execute `body`, short-circuiting on `nil`.

  This macro combines `when` and `let*`.  It takes a list of bindings
  and binds them like `let*` before executing `body`, but if any
  binding's value evaluates to `nil` the process stops and `nil` is
  immediately returned.

  Examples:

    (when-let* ((a (progn (print :a) 1))
                (b (progn (print :b) (1+ a)))
      (list a b))
    ; =>
    :A
    :B
    (1 2)

    (when-let* ((a (progn (print :a) nil))
                (b (progn (print :b) (1+ a))))
      (list a b))
    ; =>
    :A
    NIL

  "
  (alexandria:with-gensyms (block)
    `(block ,block
       (let* ,(loop :for (symbol value) :in bindings
                    :collect `(,symbol (or ,value
                                           (return-from ,block nil))))
         ,@body))))
```

There are a few things we can talk about here before we move on to `if-let*`.

First: we've documented the macro.  The examples are a little more verbose than
the previous ones, but the added side effects explicitly show the
short-circuiting evaluation.

This implementation is much less trivial than the ones we've got so far, so
let's look at a macroexpansion to see what's happening:


```lisp
(macroexpand-1
  '(when-let* ((a nil)
               (b (1+ a)))
    (list a b)))
; =>
(BLOCK #:BLOCK563
  (LET* ((A (OR NIL    (RETURN-FROM #:BLOCK563 NIL)))
         (B (OR (1+ A) (RETURN-FROM #:BLOCK563 NIL))))
    (LIST A B)))
```

The `when-let*` expands into a `block` wrapped around a `let*`.  As we're
binding each variable it's checking for `nil` with `or`.  If it ever sees `nil`
it will return from the block immediately to escape.  If it never sees `nil` it
will eventually reach the body and return normally.

We could have used a series of nested `let`s and `if`s here, and it would have
been easier to read.  But the fact that all the variables are bound in a single
`let*` will be important later, so you're just going to have to trust me for
now.

We've named the block with a gensym to avoid clobbering any `nil` block the user
might already have set up.  I explicitly specified the `nil` return value in the
`return-from`, but this isn't required because it's optional.

`if-let*` is a more difficult, because we need to make sure the appropriate
branch gets evaluated:

```lisp
(defmacro if-let* (bindings then else)
  "Bind `bindings` serially and execute `then` if all are true, or `else` otherwise.

  This macro combines `if` and `let*`.  It takes a list of bindings and
  binds them like `let*` before executing `then`, but if any binding's
  value evaluates to `nil` the process stops and the `else` branch is
  immediately executed (with no bindings in effect).

  Examples:

    (if-let* ((a (progn (print :a) 1))
              (b (progn (print :b) (1+ a)))
      (list a b)
      'nope)
    ; =>
    :A
    :B
    (1 2)

    (if-let* ((a (progn (print :a) nil))
              (b (progn (print :b) (1+ a))))
      (list a b)
      'nope)
    ; =>
    :A
    NOPE

  "
  (alexandria:with-gensyms (outer inner)
    `(block ,outer
       (block ,inner
         (let* ,(loop :for (symbol value) :in bindings
                      :collect `(,symbol (or ,value
                                             (return-from ,inner nil))))
           (return-from ,outer ,then)))
       ,else)))
```

This is a little hairy, so let's break down what's happening.  An `if-let*` will
macroexpand into something like:

```lisp
(block outer
  (block inner
    (let* (...bindings...)
      (return-from outer then)))
  else)
```

We set up a pair of blocks and begin binding the variables.  If all the bindings
succeed we return the `then` branch from the outermost block (and yes, before
you go check: `return-from` works fine with multiple values).

If any of the bindings fail we return from the inner block immediately.  This
skips all the remaining bindings plus the `then` and continues along to the
`else`, which executes and returns normally.

A full macroexpansion ends up looking like this:

```lisp
(macroexpand-1
  '(if-let* ((a nil)
             (b (1+ a)))
     (list a b)
     'nope))
; =>
(BLOCK #:OUTER568
  (BLOCK #:INNER569
    (LET* ((A (OR NIL    (RETURN-FROM #:INNER569)))
           (B (OR (1+ A) (RETURN-FROM #:INNER569))))
      (RETURN-FROM #:OUTER568 (LIST A B))))
  'NOPE)
```

It wouldn't be ideal to implement `if-let*` as a nested series of `let`s and
`if`s, because you'd need to duplicate the `else` code at each level.  The
nested pair of blocks might be a little harder to understand at first, but they
only include the `else` in a single place (and will be important for another
reason soon).

## Consistency

Now that we've got `when-let*` and `if-let*` short-circuiting on each binding,
it probably makes sense to change `when-let` and `if-let` to behave the same
way, instead of checking after all the variables are bound.  Although the later
variables don't rely on the earlier ones for these variants, it would be good if
the behavior were consistent.

To do this we can take our `-let*` versions and change the `let*` inside to
a `let`, update the documentation, and that's it:

```lisp
(defmacro when-let (bindings &body body)
  "Bind `bindings` in parallel and execute `body`, short-circuiting on `nil`.

  This macro combines `when` and `let`.  It takes a list of bindings and
  binds them like `let` before executing `body`, but if any binding's value
  evaluates to `nil` the process stops and `nil` is immediately returned.

  Examples:

    (when-let ((a (progn (print :a) 1))
               (b (progn (print :b) 2))
      (list a b))
    ; =>
    :A
    :B
    (1 2)

    (when-let ((a (progn (print :a) nil))
               (b (progn (print :b) 2)))
      (list a b))
    ; =>
    :A
    NIL

  "
  (alexandria:with-gensyms (block)
    `(block ,block
       (let ,(loop :for (symbol value) :in bindings
                   :collect `(,symbol (or ,value
                                          (return-from ,block nil))))
         ,@body))))

(defmacro if-let (bindings then else)
  "Bind `bindings` in parallel and execute `then` if all are true, or `else` otherwise.

  This macro combines `if` and `let`.  It takes a list of bindings and
  binds them like `let` before executing `then`, but if any binding's value
  evaluates to `nil` the process stops and the `else` branch is immediately
  executed (with no bindings in effect).

  Examples:

    (if-let ((a (progn (print :a) 1))
             (b (progn (print :b) 2))
      (list a b)
      'nope)
    ; =>
    :A
    :B
    (1 2)

    (if-let ((a (progn (print :a) nil))
             (b (progn (print :b) 2)))
      (list a b)
      'nope)
    ; =>
    :A
    NOPE

  "
  (alexandria:with-gensyms (outer inner)
    `(block ,outer
       (block ,inner
         (let ,(loop :for (symbol value) :in bindings
                     :collect `(,symbol (or ,value
                                            (return-from ,inner nil))))
           (return-from ,outer ,then)))
       ,else)))
```

## Declarations

Before we finish, we should make sure we've done things *right*.  Something
that's often forgotten when making new control structures with macros is
handling declarations properly.  When writing a normal `let`, you can put
declarations immediately inside the body, like this:

```lisp
(let ((foo (some-function))
      (bar (some-other-function)))
  (declare (optimize safety)
           (type integer foo)
           (type string bar))
  (do-something foo bar))
```

If we think about how our `when-let` (and the `-let*` version) macroexpands
we'll see that we don't need to do anything — it will work fine the way
we've written it:


```lisp
(macroexpand-1
  '(when-let ((foo (some-function))
              (bar (some-other-function)))
     (declare (optimize safety)
              (type integer foo)
              (type string bar))
     (do-something foo bar)))
; =>
(BLOCK #:BLOCK586
  (LET ((FOO (OR (SOME-FUNCTION) (RETURN-FROM #:BLOCK586 NIL)))
        (BAR (OR (SOME-OTHER-FUNCTION) (RETURN-FROM #:BLOCK586 NIL))))
    (DECLARE (OPTIMIZE SAFETY)
             (TYPE INTEGER FOO)
             (TYPE STRING BAR))
    (DO-SOMETHING FOO BAR)))
```

This is why I insisted on implementing the macros with a single `let` binding
all the variables.  If we tried to do this with a series of nested `let`s and
`if`s we'd have to try to parse the declarations and put the appropriate ones
for each variable under the corresponding `let`, and this would be an absolute
nightmare (plus you wouldn't even be able to exclude `nil` from the type,
because the `if` wouldn't happen until after the declaration!).

Unfortunately `if-let` is going to be some more work.  Let's think about an
example:

```lisp
(if-let ((foo (some-function))
         (bar (some-other-function)))
  (declare (optimize safety)
           (type integer foo)
           (type string bar))
  (do-something foo bar)
  (do-something-else))
```

We're going to want the declarations to *only* apply to the `then` branch,
because that's the branch that has the variables whose types we might want to
declare.  If the user wants some declarations in the `else` branch they can
wrap that branch in a `locally` and add them there.

We're going to need a way to grab any declarations the user has given out of the
body of the `if-let`.  Luckily Alexandria has a function called `parse-body`
that will do this for us.

```lisp
(defmacro if-let (bindings &body body)
  "Bind `bindings` in parallel and execute `then` if all are true, or `else` otherwise.

  `body` must be of the form `(...optional-declarations... then else)`.

  This macro combines `if` and `let`.  It takes a list of bindings and
  binds them like `let` before executing the `then` branch of `body`, but
  if any binding's value evaluates to `nil` the process stops there and the
  `else` branch is immediately executed (with no bindings in effect).

  If any `optional-declarations` are included they will only be in effect
  for the `then` branch.

  Examples:

    (if-let ((a (progn (print :a) 1))
             (b (progn (print :b) 2)))
      (list a b)
      'nope)
    ; =>
    :A
    :B
    (1 2)

    (if-let ((a (progn (print :a) nil))
             (b (progn (print :b) 2)))
      (list a b)
      'nope)
    ; =>
    :A
    NOPE

  "
  (alexandria:with-gensyms (outer inner)
    (multiple-value-bind (body declarations) (alexandria:parse-body body)
      (destructuring-bind (then else) body
        `(block ,outer
           (block ,inner
             (let ,(loop :for (symbol value) :in bindings
                         :collect `(,symbol (or ,value
                                                (return-from ,inner nil))))
               ,@declarations
               (return-from ,outer ,then)))
           ,else)))))
```

Whew!  We parse the body with `parse-body`, destructure what's left of it (to
make sure we have our two branches), and shove the declarations where they
belong.

`if-let*` is exactly the same, but with a `let*` in the macro.  I'll let you
write that one yourself.

## Result

We've now got `when-let`, `when-let*`, `if-let`, and `if-let*` working properly.
They all support multiple bindings, short-circuit appropriately, handle
declarations correctly, and are documented clearly.