Runtime library for multi-prompt delimited continuations with EffectfulJS.
From v2 the library uses @effectful/debugger for implementation of control effects. This makes the transpilation to be heavier, but many useful features are enabled by default. Such us:
- code is debuggable in VSCode using effectfuk.debugger extension
- continuations and all the functions are serializable
- and more
It's also now only supports one-layer JavaScript (no overriding of async/await and generators syntaxes at the moment). I simply don't need them, but they are quite simple to add if needed. Let me know if you need them.
Async/await and genrators are still available, though, with the same semantics as in JavaScript. However, it's not clear, why you would need them in the presence of delimited continuations.
It is the most generic effects API implementation, and it can be converted into any other one. These include JavaScript built-in effects - state, async/await, generators, exception, etc.
Delimited continuations effect is also, probably, the most complex to
understand. I'm trying to explain it using exceptions analogy here. It
is like an exception, with execution may be resumed from throw
point
several times.
This library is multi-prompt one. Prompt is a kind of a label. Imagine
JavaScript has labeled try-catch
and throw
statements. The label
is specified as another argument of throw
and only catch
block
with the same label catches it. All the others just rethrow to their
upper level. In the library the prompt(label) function is created
using CC.newPrompt
function.
Function CC.pushPrompt
is a replacement of try
block. Its first
argument is a prompt object (specifying which exceptions) to catch,
and the second argument is a try
body where an exception (with same
prompt) may raise. Note, there is no catch
block, it is specified
with throw
replacement.
The throw
replacement is CC.withSubCont
. Its first argument is a
prompt object again, specifying which CC.pushPrompt
should catch
it. If there are a few CC.pushPrompt
with the same prompt, the
innermost will be selected. The second argument is a catch
block. Unlike try-catch
where the block is adjunct of try
statement, here it is specified along with throw
replacement. Also,
there is no exception object.
The catch block is a function taking continuation object. It captures
execution path from CC.withSubCont
(throw
) to CC.pushPrompt
(try
). In JavaScript exceptions, it is simply dropped. This object
allows resuming execution from the CC.withSubCont
(throw
) several
times.
If the captured continuation never executed the library works
precisely like exceptions. First executes catch
block and continues
after try
if the catch
block doesn't throw anything else.
The continuation object received in CC.withSubCont
may be called
anywhere using CC.pushSubCont
function. Its first argument is the
continuation object captured in CC.withSubCont
.
When CC.withSubCont
is called, like for throw
statement, the
execution control is suspended (aborted). When CC.pushSubCont
is
called the execution is resumed with a resulting value of
CC.withSubCont
on the resume is a result of the second argument of
CC.pushSubCont
.
After the resumed execution control reaches CC.pushPrompt
(try
statement), if not interrupted by anything else, it continues from the
CC.pushSubCont
call. The call result is a result of CC.pushPrompt
block.
These four functions are the base. The others are defined using them.
When resuming continuations several times, if they change some variable values, the change is visible on next run by default. However, the continuation object may be cloned in whatever way your program needs (shallow/deep) to restore variables values. Alternatively, it may be Proxy based copy-on-write for better performance.
The continuations are serializable using @effectful/serialization.
npm install @effectful/cc
npm install --save-dev @effectful/js
Note, if you need to use eval
or Function constructor, --save
"@effectful/js" too.
Import into your code, and use babel-plugin-macro to transform the whole file:
import ctrl from "@effectful/js/macro";
import * as CC from "@effectful/cc";
WARNING: the babel plugin for the transpilation must run in a separate pass in the preset, for example:
{
"passPerPreset": true,
"presets": [
"some-other-preset",
{
"plugins": ["babel-plugin-macro"]
}
]
}
See @effectful/js for more details about alternative ways to transpile the code.
Since the transpiler currently doesn't support import
and thus must be pre-transpiled into CommonJS with
@babel/plugin-transform-modules-commonjs. And babel-plugin-macros ignores require
if it isn't in variable declarations, we cannot use a shorthand syntax with just import
. It must be default import (or some variable declaration for CommonJS require
), with the actual imported value never used.
Also @babel/plugin-transform-typescript may remove this import since it isn't used. To avoid this pass { "onlyRemoveTypeImports": true }
argument.
The library implements interface from A Monadic Framework for Delimited Continuations paper.
Distributed under the terms of the The MIT License (MIT).