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Specify yield* and await for in more detail. #1527

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Specify yield* and await for in more detail. #1527

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lrhn
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@lrhn lrhn commented Mar 16, 2021

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@lrhn lrhn requested a review from eernstg March 16, 2021 13:56
@google-cla google-cla bot added the cla: yes label Mar 16, 2021
@@ -16880,13 +16880,13 @@ \subsection{If}

\rationale{%
Under reasonable scope rules such code is problematic.
If we assume that \code{v} is declared
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Seems my "remove trailing spaces on save" has caught some dangling spaces.

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This PR might then need to be rebased: The current version of dartLangSpec.tex (34c4e1a) does not contain any trailing spaces.

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Trailing spaces are bad, m'kay?

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Certainly!

I'm saying that there are no trailing spaces in dartLangSpec.tex today. In general, there shouldn't be many commits where there are any trailing spaces, because I usually remember to remove them, but I can see that this PR starts from a commit where there are quite a few trailing spaces.

But this means that removing trailing spaces in this PR will not remove any trailing spaces from the result of landing this PR (they're gone already), it will just make the merging operation a bit more complex.

I was worried that this kind of "fix something that has been fixed" change could in some situations give rise to a reversal: A line here and there could suddenly be edited back to an earlier version, because it has been changed in this PR, and it contains the old text in this PR (minus that trailing space). So git thinks that the old text is what we really want, and replaces the current text by the old text from this PR.

That's the reason why I suggested doing a rebase on this PR.

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lrhn commented May 1, 2021

PTAL

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eernstg commented May 3, 2021

Oops, I didn't see this one. Looking at it now.

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LGTM, surely this is a considerable improvement!

However, we do now mention several times that a specific behavior is undefined. I suspect that said cases are rare anomalies (generally associated with silly/wrong implementations of Stream or similar classes), and they will not occur when using a platform provided stream, stream subscription, etc.

If this is true then I think it would be helpful to mention this each time it comes up. I added comments about this along the way.

@@ -104,7 +104,7 @@
% - Add requirement that the iterator of a for-in statement must have
% type `Iterator`.
% - Clarify which constructors are covered by the section 'Constant
% Constructors' and removed confusing redundancy in definiton of
% Constructors' and removed confusing redundancy in definition of
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Might as well fix and removed --> , and remove.

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Well spotted.

@@ -16880,13 +16880,13 @@ \subsection{If}

\rationale{%
Under reasonable scope rules such code is problematic.
If we assume that \code{v} is declared
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This PR might then need to be rebased: The current version of dartLangSpec.tex (34c4e1a) does not contain any trailing spaces.

@@ -18083,7 +18083,8 @@ \subsection{Yield-Each}
if the class of $o$ is not a subtype of \code{Iterable<$T_f$>}.
Otherwise
\item
The method \code{iterator} is invoked upon $o$ returning an object $i$.
The getter \code{iterator} is invoked upon $o$ returning an object $i$.
Otherwise
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Should the word Otherwise actually be added here?

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Also, the phrase is invoked upon is quite unusual in this spec, and it seems likely that I'm not the only reader who would need to look at it twice in order to understand what it means.

Wouldn't it be more like other parts of the specification if we use Evaluate \code{$o$.iterator} to an object $i$?

(We do say it like Evaluate \code{$v$.iterator}, where $v$ is a fresh variable bound to $o$. in many locations, but we do also have the slight abuse of notation where a symbol is at first denoting an object, and then considered to be a variable. Search for, e.g., 'evaluation of $ee$ is equivalent to the method invocation'.)

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I should follow the norm here.
I was probably trying to avoid introducing new syntax (which I think is a bad choice in general, semantics should be explained at the semantic level without dipping back into syntax). But that's a much larger rewrite to avoid that.

@@ -18083,7 +18083,8 @@ \subsection{Yield-Each}
if the class of $o$ is not a subtype of \code{Iterable<$T_f$>}.
Otherwise
\item
The method \code{iterator} is invoked upon $o$ returning an object $i$.
The getter \code{iterator} is invoked upon $o$ returning an object $i$.
Otherwise
\item
\label{moveNext} The \code{moveNext} method of $i$ is invoked on it
with no arguments.
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And Evaluate \code{$u$.moveNext()}, where $u$ is a fresh variable bound to $i$., or Evaluate \code{$i$.moveNext()}.

then execution of $m$ is suspended until $u$ is resumed or canceled.
If the stream associated with $m$ becomes paused,
then $u$ is paused by executing \code{$v$.pause();}.
It is unspecified what happens if this execution throws.
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Wouldn't it be a friendly gesture to the practical developer to mention in commentary that a Stream whose pause throws is an unexpected anomaly, and a platform provided Stream will never do so?

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Will do.

\code{$p$.listen} and let $v$ be a fresh variable bound to $u$.
\item
If the stream associated with $m$ is paused, then $u$ is immediately
paused as if by invoking \code{$v$.pause} with no arguments.
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What if it throws?

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The default semantic fallback is that if some sub-part of the semantics of a construct throws, so does the construct itself unless otherwise stated. In this case, nothing otherwise is stated, so if $v$.pause throws, so does the await for body evaluation. (Which then does say what happens in that case - it cancels the subscription and rethrows).

Now, should it work like that? Probably yes.
If pause throws ... the stream probably isn't paused. Something is deeply wrong with that stream, so it's better to exit that loop immediately, and stop handling events from the stream entirely. (We should ignore any events after calling cancel).

It's possible to be obnoxious about the exiting. Say:

label: try {
  yield whatnot;
} finally {
  break label;
}

This will swallow any control flow trying to leave the try block and continue unabated.
We can't entirely control what happens after that, if the stream subscription acts maliciously.
(And that's why C# disallowed control flow in finally blocks!)

paused as if by invoking \code{$v$.pause} with no arguments.
\item{}
If the stream associated with $m$ has been cancelled, then
$u$ is cancelled by executing \code{await $v$.cancel();}.
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Isn't it more straightforward to say evaluating \code{await $v$.cancel()}. It doesn't bring much value to have that (visually clunky) semicolon. If we wish to make the point that if it evaluates to an object then that object is ignored then we can say that explicitly, but it seems sufficient to actually ignore it by not mentioning it. ;-)

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ACK. Evaluating an expression is cleaner.

If the stream associated with $m$ has been cancelled, then
$u$ is cancelled by executing \code{await $v$.cancel();}.
If this execution does not throw, the execution of $s$
completes by returning without a value.
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Sounds like we could have commentary saying that it is an unexpected anomaly if await $v$.cancel() throws, it would only occur if listen or pause has side-effects where the stream is cancelled, and this will not occur with a platform provided stream.

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Actually, cancel is one of the functions which can throw. It's not great when it does, but it's allowed and should be handled gracefully (which means propagating the error).

If the stream $u$ associated with $m$ has been paused,
then execution of $m$ is suspended until $u$ is resumed or canceled.
If the stream associated with $m$ becomes paused,
then $u$ is paused by executing \code{$v$.pause();}.
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Similarly to line 18138, this could be evaluating \code{$v$.pause()}.

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ACK.

the stream execution of $s$ returns without an object
(\ref{statementCompletion}).
If the stream associated with $m$ is resumed after being paused,
then $u$ is resumed as by executing \code{$v$.resume();}.
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Could again be evaluating \code{$v$.resume()}.

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ACK

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Thanks, good points.

\item
The $o$ stream is listened to by invoking \code{$v_o$.listen}
with system provided arguments,
where $v_o$ is a fresh variable referencing the stream $o$.
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ACK. Much better, yes.

\code{$p$.listen} and let $v$ be a fresh variable bound to $u$.
\item
If the stream associated with $m$ is paused, then $u$ is immediately
paused as if by invoking \code{$v$.pause} with no arguments.
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The default semantic fallback is that if some sub-part of the semantics of a construct throws, so does the construct itself unless otherwise stated. In this case, nothing otherwise is stated, so if $v$.pause throws, so does the await for body evaluation. (Which then does say what happens in that case - it cancels the subscription and rethrows).

Now, should it work like that? Probably yes.
If pause throws ... the stream probably isn't paused. Something is deeply wrong with that stream, so it's better to exit that loop immediately, and stop handling events from the stream entirely. (We should ignore any events after calling cancel).

It's possible to be obnoxious about the exiting. Say:

label: try {
  yield whatnot;
} finally {
  break label;
}

This will swallow any control flow trying to leave the try block and continue unabated.
We can't entirely control what happens after that, if the stream subscription acts maliciously.
(And that's why C# disallowed control flow in finally blocks!)

paused as if by invoking \code{$v$.pause} with no arguments.
\item{}
If the stream associated with $m$ has been cancelled, then
$u$ is cancelled by executing \code{await $v$.cancel();}.
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ACK. Evaluating an expression is cleaner.

If the stream associated with $m$ has been cancelled, then
$u$ is cancelled by executing \code{await $v$.cancel();}.
If this execution does not throw, the execution of $s$
completes by returning without a value.
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Actually, cancel is one of the functions which can throw. It's not great when it does, but it's allowed and should be handled gracefully (which means propagating the error).

If the stream $u$ associated with $m$ has been paused,
then execution of $m$ is suspended until $u$ is resumed or canceled.
If the stream associated with $m$ becomes paused,
then $u$ is paused by executing \code{$v$.pause();}.
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ACK.

% The error can be passed to \code{Zone.current.handleUncaughtError}.
\item
If the stream associated with $m$ is cancelled,
then $u$ is also cancelled as by executing \code{await $v$.cancel();}.
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Preferably, the code calling stream.cancel will get the future. That assumes that the cancel comes from cancelling a StreamSubscription, which ... it does, but we haven't been explicit about that.

Maybe I should go back to the drawing board and be explicit about everything.

Calling listen on the stream returned by the async* function returns a stream subscription.
The stream subscription doesn't "become paused", rather someone calls pause on it. That means we have a receiver for any synchronous errors happening during that call. Same for resume and cancel.

@@ -104,7 +104,7 @@
% - Add requirement that the iterator of a for-in statement must have
% type `Iterator`.
% - Clarify which constructors are covered by the section 'Constant
% Constructors' and removed confusing redundancy in definiton of
% Constructors' and removed confusing redundancy in definition of
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Well spotted.

@@ -16880,13 +16880,13 @@ \subsection{If}

\rationale{%
Under reasonable scope rules such code is problematic.
If we assume that \code{v} is declared
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Trailing spaces are bad, m'kay?

@@ -18083,7 +18083,8 @@ \subsection{Yield-Each}
if the class of $o$ is not a subtype of \code{Iterable<$T_f$>}.
Otherwise
\item
The method \code{iterator} is invoked upon $o$ returning an object $i$.
The getter \code{iterator} is invoked upon $o$ returning an object $i$.
Otherwise
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I should follow the norm here.
I was probably trying to avoid introducing new syntax (which I think is a bad choice in general, semantics should be explained at the semantic level without dipping back into syntax). But that's a much larger rewrite to avoid that.

not begin to listen to the stream $o$.}
Otherwise
\item
The $o$ stream is listened to by invoking \code{$v_o$.listen}
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It is.

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I added a couple of extra comments, especially about the trailing spaces.

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