Files in the top-level directory from the latest check-in of branch trunk
- cmd
- sxbuiltins
- sxeval
- sxreader
- www
- boolean.go
- boolean_test.go
- const.go
- go.mod
- LICENSE.txt
- list.go
- list_test.go
- number.go
- number_test.go
- README.md
- sequence.go
- sequence_test.go
- string.go
- sx.go
- symbol.go
- symbol_test.go
- undef.go
- vector.go
sx - symbolic expressions
Sx is a collection of libraries and frameworks to work with s-expressions.
See for more information on its project page.
Types
Sx support the following atomic, immutable types:
- Numbers contain numeric values.
Currently, only integer values are supported. There is no maximum or minimum
integer value. They optionally start with a
+
or-
sign and contain only digits0
, ...,9
. - Strings are UTF-8 encoded Unicode character sequences.
They are delimited by
"
characters. Special characters inside the string, like the"
character itself, are escaped by the\
character. - Symbols are sequences of printable / visible Unicode characters. They are typically used to bind them to values within an environment. Another use case is symbolic computation.
Sx supports nested lists. A list is delimited by parentheses: ( ... )
. Within
a list, all values are separated by space characters, including new line. Lists
can be nested. Internally, lists are created by pairs. The first part of a
pair, called "car", contains the actual value stored at the beginning of a
list. The second part, called "cdr", typically links to the next pair. This
allows multiple lists to share elements. A proper list is a list, where the
last elements second part is the empty list. The last element of a list may be
a pair, where the second part references a values except a list. Such lists are
improper lists. Since the second part may reference any value, even earlier
elements of a list, lists may be circular. Single pairs are denoted as (X .
Y)
, where the car references S and the cdr references Y (Y is not a list).
All other types supported by Sx cannot be specified via the reader.
- Vector is a mutable sequence of values, to be used if direct access to values of a longer sequence is needed. A list has only O(n) access. Vectors are typically more memory efficient, compared to pair lists. However, they cannot be process recursively and they are not able to share elements.
- Undefined contains just the undefined value. It is signalled by some functions that should not abort with an error.
There is no special boolean value. The empty list ()
, the empty string
""
, and the undefined value are considered as a "false" value. All other
values are treated as a "true" value. Most functions that return a boolean
value currently return the empty list to signal a "false" value or return
either the number 1
or the symbol T
as a "true" value.
Vectors and lists are both sequences and share some common functions / methods. You can calculate the length of a sequence, check for a length less than a value, fetch the n-th element of a sequence, convert a sequence to a pair list, and iterate over the elements in a ordered way.