This section can serve as a sort of cookbook for a user who is new to leveraging LISP languages or unsure of where to start with ~relish~.
More ideas may be explored in the file:snippets directory of this project.
The author encourages any users to contribute their own personal favorites not already in this section either by adding them to the file:snippets folder, or to extend the documentation here.
*** while-let combo
#+BEGIN_SRC lisp
;; myiter = (1 (2 3 4 5 6))
(def myiter 'iterator over a list' (head (1 2 3 4 5 6)))
;; iterate over each element in mylist
(while (gt? (len (cdr myiter)) 0) ;; while there are more elements to consume
(let ((elem (car myiter)) ;; elem = consumed element from myiter
(remaining (cdr myiter))) ;; remaining = rest of elements
(echo elem) ;; do a thing with the element, could be any operation
(def myiter (head remaining)))) ;; consume next element, loop
#+END_SRC
The while-let pattern can be used for many purposes. Above it is used to iterate over elements in a list. It can also be used to receive connections to a socket and write data to them.
*** TODO main loop application
- state switch (while-toggle)
- state calculation
*** TODO short-circuit guard
- circuit example
- while-not-circuit-do-more-work
*** let destructuring
~let~ is very useful for destructuring complex return types. If you have a function that may return a whole list of values you can then call it from ~let~ to consume the result data.
In this example a let form is used to destructure a call to ~head~. ~head~ returns a list consisting of ~(first-element rest-of-list)~ (for more information see ~(help head)~).
The ~let~ form starts with the output of ~head~ stored in ~head-struct~ (short for head-structured). The next variables defined are ~first~ and ~rest~ which contain individual elements from the return of the call to ~head~.
Finally, the bodies evaluated in the ~let~ form are able to operate on the head and the rest.
#+BEGIN_SRC lisp
;; individually access the top of a list
(let ((head-struct (head (1 2 3))
(first (car head-struct))
(rest (cdr head-struct)))
(echo "this is 1: " first)
(echo "this is 2, 3: " rest))
#+END_SRC
*** if-set?
One common pattern seen in bash scripts and makefiles is the set-variable-if-not-set pattern.
#+BEGIN_SRC shell
MYVAR ?= MY_SPECIAL_VALUE
#+END_SRC
Translated, can be seen below
#+BEGIN_SRC lisp
(if (set? myvar)
() ;; no need to do anything... or add a call here
(def myvar "MY_SPECIAL_VALUE"))
#+END_SRC
Alternatively this combination can be used to process flags in a script or application:
By default Relish will read from ~/.relishrc for configuration, but the default shell will also accept a filename from the RELISH_CFG_FILE environment variable.
On start, any shell which leverages the configuration code in the config module (file:src/config.rs) will create a clean seperate context, including default configuration values, within which the standard library will be initialized.
The configuration file is evaluated and run as a standalone script and may include arbitrary executable code. Afterwards, configuration values found in the variable map will be used to configure the standard library function mappings that the shell will use.
- Variables and functions defined during configuration will carry over to the user/script interpreter, allowing the user to load any number of custom functions and variables.
You may choose to override these functions if you would like to include your own special functions in your own special interpreter, or if you would like to pare down the stdlib to a small minimal subet of what it is.
You can view the code for standard library functions in file:src/stl/.