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1 point by almkglor 6013 days ago | link | parent

The main reason I'm more partial to names is SNAP, which is shared-nothing except for really, really static objects, such as code and symbols. Global variables have an overhead in assigning to them, and global structures are simply not mutable (the process effectively gets its own copy of the structure in the global variable, so any mutations occur in its own copy)

In theory it would be possible to add a type object that is dynamically created but is immutable once created, but attaching everything to such a type object would make dynamism a little slower. My plan had been to define polymorphic functions on (probably symbol) types, and replace 'call* with overloading of apply:

  (defcall foo (v x)
    (do-something-on-foo v x))
  =>
  (defm <base>apply ((t gs42 foo) x)
    (let v (rep gs42)
       (do-something-on-foo v x)))
> So, are you gonna make a symbol-mangling system, or what?

Been thinking of that somewhat; basically the most straightforward would be a symbol-conversion macro upon which any symbol mangling system can be built:

  (resymbol (foo foo@bar
             nitz nitz@bar)
    (+ (foo this) (nitz that)))
  =>
  (do (+ (foo@bar this) (nitz@bar that)))