I think it is more than a matter of "eager" vs "on-demand" computation. T{} can't be constructed until its size is known. Semantically this is a recursive definition.
However, a human may falsely assume that T{} is constructable and given that they may think len(T{}.a) can be computed. If on the other hand you had type T struct { a [10]int;b *[len(T{}.a)]int } there would be no problem. On Wed, 09 May 2018 17:44:55 -0000 "'Robert Griesemer' via golang-nuts" <golang-nuts@googlegroups.com> wrote: > > PS: Here's an example where we (humans) can obviously compute the size of a > type, yet neither cmd/compile, gccgo, nor go/types have any success in > doing so: > > type T struct { > a [10]int > b [len(T{}.a)]int > } > > The problem is that all implementations have an "eager" (depth-first) > approach somewhere leading to requiring all of T to be set up before we can > determine the size of T.a. Specifically, when determining the size of T.b > we must be careful to not look at the size of T (which is in the process of > being determined), and only at the size of T.a (which we can obviously > tell). Furthermore, we must use an algorithm that computes the size of T.a > "on demand", not in the order as the fields appear (otherwise it wouldn't > work if b was before a). And so forth. All these things make size > computation more complicated and expensive. That question is: Is it worth > the extra cost? Or are these cases esoteric and don't show up in real code? > And if we use simpler algorithms, is there an easy way to describe which > types are accepted and which aren't? > > > On Wed, May 9, 2018 at 10:00 AM Robert Griesemer <g...@golang.org> wrote: > > > This sounds all good. > > > > I am not disputing at all what you are saying, but a) the spec doesn't > > actually state any of this explicitly; and b) I agree that size computation > > is straight-forward once a type data structure is all constructed. The > > caveat is the 2nd part of this sentence: We're not doing always a correct > > job of setting up a type completely before it's used. Hence we have issues > > like #25305. The compiler does a better job than go/types most of the time; > > but sometimes it's the other way around. > > > > I think we also have been hesitant to simply disallow "cyclical types" > > (per your definition of cyclical) in the spec because we (or at least I) > > don't have a good understanding that our code actually detects exactly > > those. We have plenty of examples of code where we could determine the > > type's size but we still exclude the type. For instance > > > > type T = *T > > > > T has clearly the size of a pointer, yet we disallow (in the compiler) > > such types. In this case it's by design (of the type alias proposal), but > > it would be nice if we could relax it. But I'm not sure we (or I) > > understand all the consequences fully, quite yet. And I think we have other > > situations (not involving alias types) where we run into problems, even > > though we can compute the type's size. > > > > (FWIW, I don't think everybody equates "cyclic type" with "type size is > > not computable". People tend to use "cyclic" and "recursive" > > interchangeably for types. I was definitively using "cyclic" as "recursive" > > in #25305). > > > > More generally, I think it would be great if we could state exactly what > > you said in the spec: > > > > 1) Types for which their sizes cannot be computed (see 2) are invalid. > > 2) The size of a type is computable if ... (and then we give essentially > > the rules you outlined already). > > > > As said above, 2) requires all involved types to be set up sufficiently > > such that we can determine the relevant size information. Sometimes that's > > not the case. Hence my comment in the issue #25305. > > > > Finally, I agree that there shouldn't be a difference between cycle > > detection by a human and a computer. But the problem is that the computer > > may be using an algorithm that may be conservative, or incorrect, or not > > very general (for the sake of speed in the common case). > > > > On Wed, May 9, 2018 at 1:21 AM Jan Mercl <0xj...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > >> Robert Griesemer wrote in > >> https://github.com/golang/go/issues/25305#issuecomment-387624488 at May > >> 9th: > >> > >> I'm probably using incorrect assumptions. Let me summarize them here: > >> > >> > >> 1) A type is cyclical iff its size is not computable. > >> > >> > >> I'm really not sure if this is what the specification really means. If > >> not then I wonder why not, because > >> > >> > >> 2) Determining computability of the size of a type is trivial (wrt "we go > >> through great lengths to detect such cycles"). > >> > >> > >> AFAICT, there are two classes of types. > >> > >> > >> In the first (scalar) class the size of T is a constant fully determined > >> by the kind of T: bool, integers, real and complex types, slices, > >> interfaces, pointers, maps, channels, functions. (The last three being jus > t > >> a special case of a pointer.) > >> > >> > >> In the second (non-scalar) class a type T has size dependent > >> (transitively) on other types (T_1, ... T_n), possibly including T itself. > >> Scalar T_i brings no problem in computing the size of T. > >> > >> > >> For non-scalar T_i, all we need is a sentinel provided by knowing if the > >> size of a type is a) not yet determined, b) being determined, c) > >> determined/valid. When the size of T is needed, but not yet determined, > >> it's first marked as "being determined". If, during computation of the siz > e > >> of T, we run into the sentinel, ie. we need to know the size of T_i marked > >> "size being determined", we have proved the size of T is not computable. > >> Otherwise the size of T is computed, stored and T is marked as "size > >> determined/valid". > >> > >> > >> Wrt "even if they are "obviously" not cyclic to a human reader." > >> > >> > >> I think there's no difference between cyclic type determined by a program > >> or by a human reader except for a bit higher error rate in the later case > >> ;-) -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.