SRFI 8: receive: Binding to multiple values

by John David Stone
Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa 50112, email.

This copy of the SRFI 8 specification document is distributed as part of the Racket package srfi-doc.

The canonical source of this document is https://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-8/srfi-8.html.

Status

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Related SRFIs

The syntax proposed in this SRFI is used in the reference implementation of SRFI-1, ``List library.''

Abstract

The only mechanism that R5RS provides for binding identifiers to the values of a multiple-valued expression is the primitive call-with-values. This SRFI proposes a more concise, more readable syntax for creating such bindings.

Rationale

Although R5RS supports multiple-valued expressions, it provides only the essential procedures values and call-with-values. It is evident that the authors expected Scheme programmers to define other constructs in terms of these, abstracting common patterns of use.

One such pattern consists in binding an identifier to each of the values of a multiple-valued expression and then evaluating an expression in the scope of the bindings. As an instance of this pattern, consider the following excerpt from a quicksort procedure:


(call-with-values
  (lambda ()
    (partition (precedes pivot) others))
  (lambda (fore aft)
    (append (qsort fore) (cons pivot (qsort aft)))))

Here partition is a multiple-valued procedure that takes two arguments, a predicate and a list, and returns two lists, one comprising the list elements that satisfy the predicate, the other those that do not. The purpose of the expression shown is to partition the list others, sort each of the sublists, and recombine the results into a sorted list.

For our purposes, the important step is the binding of the identifiers fore and aft to the values returned by partition. Expressing the construction and use of these bindings with the call-by-values primitive is cumbersome: One must explicitly embed the expression that provides the values for the bindings in a parameterless procedure, and one must explicitly embed the expression to be evaluated in the scope of those bindings in another procedure, writing as its parameters the identifiers that are to be bound to the values received.

These embeddings are boilerplate, exposing the underlying binding mechanism but not revealing anything relevant to the particular program in which it occurs. So the use of a syntactic abstraction that exposes only the interesting parts -- the identifiers to be bound, the multiple-valued expression that supplies the values, and the body of the receiving procedure -- makes the code more concise and more readable:


(receive (fore aft) (partition (precedes pivot) others)
  (append (qsort fore) (cons pivot (qsort aft))))

The advantages are similar to those of a let-expression over a procedure call with a lambda-expression as its operator. In both cases, cleanly separating a ``header'' in which the bindings are established from a ``body'' in which they are used makes it easier to follow the code.

Specification

(receive <formals> <expression> <body>)     library syntax

<Formals>, <expression>, and <body> are as described in R5RS. Specifically, <formals> can have any of three forms:

In any case, the expressions in <body> are evaluated sequentially in the extended environment. The results of the last expression in the body are the values of the receive-expression.

Reference implementation


(define-syntax receive
  (syntax-rules ()
    ((receive formals expression body ...)
     (call-with-values (lambda () expression)
                       (lambda formals body ...)))))


Copyright (C) John David Stone (1999). All Rights Reserved.

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Editor: Mike Sperber