Major Section: TUTORIAL5-MISCELLANEOUS-EXAMPLES
This example illustrates the use of ACL2's IO primitives to read the forms in a file. See io.
This example provides a solution to the following problem. Let's say that
you have a file that contains s-expressions. Suppose that you want to build
a list by starting with nil
, and updating it ``appropriately'' upon
encountering each successive s-expression in the file. That is, suppose that
you have written a function update-list
such that
(update-list obj current-list)
returns the list obtained by ``updating''
current-list
with the next object, obj
, encountered in the file. The
top-level function for processing such a file, returning the final list,
could be defined as follows. Notice that because it opens a channel to the
given file, this function modifies state and hence must return
state. Thus it actually returns two values: the final list and the new
state.
(defun process-file (filename state) (mv-let (channel state) (open-input-channel filename :object state) (mv-let (result state) (process-file1 nil channel state) ;see below (let ((state (close-input-channel channel state))) (mv result state)))))The function
process-file1
referred to above takes the currently
constructed list (initially, nil
), together with a channel to the file
being read and the state, and returns the final updated list. Notice
that this function is tail recursive. This is important because many Lisp
compilers will remove tail recursion, thus avoiding the potential for stack
overflows when the file contains a large number of forms.
(defun process-file1 (current-list channel state) (mv-let (eofp obj state) (read-object channel state) (cond (eofp (mv current-list state)) (t (process-file1 (update-list obj current-list) channel state)))))
As an exercise, you might want to add guards to the functions above and
verify the guards (see verify-guards). See args or make a call of the form
(guard 'your-function nil (w state))
to see the guard of an existing
function.