Flo: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

aus dem Wiki des Entropia e.V., CCC Karlsruhe
K (syntaxhighlight macht das dann noch bunt)
KKeine Bearbeitungszusammenfassung
Zeile 25: Zeile 25:
Dieses Perl (*duck*) kann ja keiner lesen!<span id="footref1">[[#footnote1|<sup><small>1)</small></sup>]]</span> Daher:
Dieses Perl (*duck*) kann ja keiner lesen!<span id="footref1">[[#footnote1|<sup><small>1)</small></sup>]]</span> Daher:
{| cellpadding=5
{| cellpadding=5
|<syntaxhighlight lang="perl">
|<syntaxhighlight lang="lisp">
(eval-when (:compile-toplevel :load-toplevel :execute)
(eval-when (:compile-toplevel :load-toplevel :execute)
   (defvar *flo-sequence* #("dividuum" "syb" "fiji" "flowhase" "florolf" "FlorianJW")))
   (defvar *flo-sequence* #("dividuum" "syb" "fiji" "flowhase" "florolf" "FlorianJW")))

Version vom 22. Februar 2013, 13:06 Uhr

Qsicon Ueberarbeiten.png Wir weisen darauf hin, dass möglicherweise nicht alle Beiträge den Anforderungen genügen. Die Anforderungen sind: Flos sind in Liste "flo" gespeichert, zur Ausführ- oder Compilierzeit werden durch den Code einzelne flo0, flo1, flo2, flo3 Variablen angelegt, die später dann auch zur Ausgabe verwendet werden.
 Wir sind die Flo, Widerstand ist zwecklos!

Beiträge, die die Anforderungen erfüllen

#!/usr/bin/env ruby

flo = [ "dividuum", "syb", "fiji", "flowhase", "florolf", "FlorianJW" ]

# flos sind keine arrayss1!
for i in 0..flo.size-1
  eval "flo#{i} = flo[#{i}]"
  puts "flo#{i} == \"" + eval("flo#{i}") + "\""
end


Dieses Perl (*duck*) kann ja keiner lesen!1) Daher:

(eval-when (:compile-toplevel :load-toplevel :execute)
  (defvar *flo-sequence* #("dividuum" "syb" "fiji" "flowhase" "florolf" "FlorianJW")))

(defmacro make-individual-flo-variables ()
  (cons 'progn
        (loop for flo across *flo-sequence*
              for i from 0
              collect `(defvar ,(read-from-string (format nil "*flo~d*" i)) ,flo))))

(make-individual-flo-variables)

(dotimes (i 5)
    (format t "~&flo~d = ~a" i (eval (read-from-string (format nil "*flo~d*" i)))))
Lisplogo warning 128.png

Dreckiges C:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <unistd.h>
const int flolen = 6;
static const char *flos[] = {"dividuum","syb","fiji","flowhase","florolf", "FlorianJW"};
static const char *proghead = "#include <stdio.h>\nint main(void){\n";
static const char *progend =  "  return(0);\n}\n";
int main(void){
        int i; FILE *o;
        o=fopen("flo2.c","w");
        fputs(proghead,o);
        for(i=0;i<flolen;i++){
                fprintf(o,"  char *flo%d = \"%s\";\n",i,flos[i]);
                fprintf(o,"  printf(\"flo%%d ist %%s\\n\",%d,flo%d);\n",i,i); }
        fputs(progend,o);
        fclose(o);
        system("/usr/bin/gcc -o flos flo2.c;./flos;rm -f flo2.c flos");
        return 0;
}


Nu aber wirklich noch in Perl:

#!/usr/bin/perl

@flo = ( "dividuum", "syb", "fiji", "flowhase", "florolf", "FlorianJW" );

for $i (0..$#flo) {
  eval "\$flo$i = \$flo\[$i\]";
  print "\$flo$i eq \"" . eval("\$flo$i") . "\"\n";
}

Perl:

#!/usr/bin/perl

@flo = ( "dividuum", "syb", "fiji", "flowhase", "florolf", "FlorianJW" );

for $i (0..$#flo) {
  ${"flo$i"} = $flo[$i];
  print "\$flo$i eq \"" . ${"flo$i"} . "\"\n";
}

PHP:

<?php
$flo = array( "dividuum", "syb", "fiji", "flowhase", "florolf", "FlorianJW" );

foreach ($flo as $i => $x) {
  ${"flo$i"} = $flo[$i];
  echo "\$flo$i = \"" . ${"flo$i"} . "\"\n";
}
?>


Gute alte Bash:

#!/bin/sh

flo="dividuum syb fiji flowhase florolf FlorianJW"

n=0
for f in $flo
do
  eval flo$n=$f
  echo -n "flo$n == "
  eval echo \$flo$n
  n=$(($n+1))
done


Realisiert in PHP, Lisp, Perl, XML, Bash und XSLT und immernoch kürzer als die C-Version:

<?php
$flo = array( "dividuum", "syb", "fiji", "flowhase", "florolf", "FlorianJW" );

$l = fopen("flo.lisp", "w"); $p = fopen("flo.pl", "w");
fwrite($l, '(progn (format t "~a" "<flo>")');
fwrite($p,'
print <<EOF
  <xsl:stylesheet version="1.0"
                  xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
                  xmlns="http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/strict">
  <xsl:template match="/">');
    for($i=0;$i<count($flo);$i++) {
      fwrite($l, "(format t \"~a~a~a\" \"<flo$i>\" \"$flo[$i]\" \"</flo$i>\")");
      fwrite($p, "flo$i == <xsl:value-of select=\"flo/flo$i\"/>\n");
    }
    fwrite($l, '(format t "~a" "</flo>"))');
    fwrite($p,'
  </xsl:template>
  </xsl:stylesheet>
EOF'."\n");
fclose($l); fclose($p);
system("sbcl --noinform --load flo.lisp --eval '(quit)' > flo.xml");
system("perl flo.pl > flo.xslt");
system("xsltproc flo.xslt flo.xml | grep -v xml");
?>

Php-logo.gif Lisplogo warning 128.png Perl logo mermaid.png

Bash-org.jpg Xslt.png

Noch einmal in Ruby:

#!/usr/bin/env ruby

flo = [ "dividuum", "syb", "fiji", "flowhase", "florolf", "FlorianJW" ]

# flos sind keine arrayss1!
flo.each_with_index do | f, i |
  instance_variable_set "@flo#{i}", f
  puts "flo#{i} = #{instance_variable_get "@flo#{i}"}"
end

'cause JavaScript rocks:

flo = new Array("dividuum", "syb", "fiji", "flowhase", "florolf", "FlorianJW");
for (i in flo) {
  eval("flo"+i+" = flo["+i+"]");
  dump("flo"+i+" == "+eval("flo"+i)+"\n");
}

Wir moegen Lua:

#include <lua.h>
#include <lualib.h>
#include <lauxlib.h>

lua_State *L;

char *flos[] = {"dividuum", "syb", "fiji", "flowhase", "florolf", "FlorianJW"};
char buf[1024];

void main() {
        char *p;
        int i;

        L = luaL_newstate();
        luaL_openlibs(L);

        for(i=0; i < 6; i++) {
                sprintf(buf, "flo%d", i);
                lua_pushstring(L, flos[i]);
                lua_setglobal(L, buf);
        }

        p=buf;
        for(i=0; i < 6; i++)
                p += sprintf(p, "print(\"flo%d = \" .. flo%d);", i, i);

        luaL_dostring(L, buf);
}

C++11:

#include <vector>
#include <string>
#include <cstdlib>
#include <fstream>

using namespace std;

int main(){
	vector<string> flo={"dividuum", "syb", "fiji", "flowhase", "florolf", "FlorianJW"};
	ofstream cpp_2("cpp_2.cpp");
	cpp_2<<"#include <iostream>\n#include <string> \nusing namespace std;\nint main(){\n";
	for(int i=0;i<flo.size();++i){
		cpp_2<<"\tstring flo"<<i<<" =\""<<flo[i]<<"\";\n";
	}
	cpp_2<<"\tcout\n";
	for(int i=0;i<flo.size();++i){
		cpp_2<<"\t\t<<flo"<<i;
		if(i+1==flo.size()){
			cpp_2<<"<<endl;\n";
		}
		else{
			cpp_2<<"<<\", \"\n";
		}
		
	}
	cpp_2<<"}"<<endl;
	cpp_2.close();
	system("g++ cpp_2.cpp -o cpp_2; ./cpp_2");
	return 0;
}

Bloatiger Angebercode, der auch noch etwas völlig anderes macht

Und nochmal das, was das Ruby-Programm "mit viel bloatigem Metaprogramming-Foo" macht, allerdings wiederum in Common Lisp gegossen:
(Warnung: (Zumindest) als Lispprogramm ist dieses Beispiel ziemlich unsinning, und z.B. die PRINT-OBJECT-Methode widerspricht der gängigen Konvention.)

(defclass flo ()
  ((name :initarg :name :reader flo-name)
   (skill :initarg :skill :reader flo-skill)
   (notebook :initarg :notebook :reader flo-notebook)))

(defun slot-value-or-something (object &key (slot 'name) (something "without name"))
  (if (slot-boundp object slot)
      (slot-value object slot)
      something))

(defmethod print-object ((flo flo) stream)
  (format stream "~&~a is actually ~a and is good at ~a.~&He loves hacking on his ~a."
          (class-name (class-of flo))
          (slot-value-or-something flo)
          (slot-value-or-something flo :slot 'skill    :something "nothing")
          (slot-value-or-something flo :slot 'notebook :something "dulcimer")))

(defmacro def-flo-class (class-name &key name skill notebook)
  (macrolet ((make-slot-def (name)
               `(when ,name
                  `(,',name :initform ,,name))))
  `(defclass ,class-name (flo)
     ,(remove nil (list
                   (make-slot-def name)
                   (make-slot-def skill)
                   (make-slot-def notebook))))))

(def-flo-class |Flo0|
    :name "dividuum"
    :skill "DOOM"
    :notebook "old Dell")

(def-flo-class |Flo1|
    :name "Peter"
    :skill "math"
    :notebook "IBM Thinkpad")

(def-flo-class |Flo2|
    :name "Fiji"
    :skill "WOW"
    :notebook "I-have-no-idea")

(def-flo-class |Flo3|
    :name "flohase"
    :skill "hoppeln"
    :notebook "hasIbook")

(def-flo-class |Flo4|
    :name "florolf"
    :skill "konfusion"
    :notebook "Thinkpad")

(def-flo-class |Flo5|
    :name "FlorianJW"
    :skill "pirat"
    :notebook "I-have-no-idea")


(let ((flos (list (make-instance '|Flo0|)
                  (make-instance '|Flo1|)
                  (make-instance '|Flo2|)
                  (make-instance '|Flo3|)
                  (make-instance '|Flo4|)
                  (make-instance '|Flo5|))))
  (dolist (flo flos)
    (print flo)))
Lisplogo 256.png

Ru^W Objektorientiertes C

// Das aendern:
#include "/usr/local/lib/ruby/1.8/i386-freebsd5/ruby.h"

VALUE flo_init(VALUE self)
{
        char *flo[] = {"dividuum", "syb", "fiji", "flowhase", "florolf", "FlorianJW"};
        int i;

        for(i = 0; i < 6; i++)
        {
                char varname[7];
                sprintf(varname, "@flo%i", i);  // Insecure!
                rb_iv_set(self, varname, rb_str_new2(flo[i]));
        }
}

VALUE flo_each(VALUE self)
{
        int i;
        VALUE vars = rb_funcall(self, rb_intern("instance_variables"), 0);
        VALUE varname = rb_ary_shift(vars);

        while(varname != Qnil)
        {
                rb_yield(rb_ary_new3(2, varname, rb_iv_get(self, RSTRING(varname)->ptr)));
                varname = rb_ary_shift(vars);
        }

        return(Qnil);
}

int main()
{
        VALUE flo;

        ruby_init();

        flo = rb_define_class("Flo", rb_cObject);
        rb_define_method(flo, "initialize", flo_init, 0);
        rb_define_method(flo, "each", flo_each, 0);

        rb_eval_string("Flo.new.each { |name,value| puts \"#{name.gsub(/^@/, '')} = #{value}\" }");

        return(0);
}

Die Enterprise-Loesung

Das Schlimmste aus beiden Welten.

#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <string.h>

#include <jni.h>

const char *flos[] = { "dividuum", "syb", "fiji", "flowhase", "florolf", "FlorianJW" };
const int n_flos = sizeof(flos)/sizeof(char*);

unsigned char class[] = {
	0xca, 0xfe, 0xba, 0xbe,
	0x00, 0x00,
	0x00, 0x33,
	0, 0,
	0x01, 0x00, 16, 'j', 'a', 'v', 'a', '/', 'l', 'a', 'n', 'g', '/', 'O', 'b', 'j', 'e', 'c', 't',
	0x01, 0x00, 4, 'F', 'l', 'o', 's',
	0x01, 0x00, 18, 'L', 'j', 'a', 'v', 'a', '/', 'l', 'a', 'n', 'g', '/', 'S', 't', 'r', 'i', 'n', 'g', ';',
	0x01, 0x00, 6, '<', 'i', 'n', 'i', 't', '>',
	0x01, 0x00, 3, '(', ')', 'V',
	0x07, 0, 1,
	0x07, 0, 2,
	0x0C, 0, 4, 0, 5,
	0x0A, 0, 6, 0, 8,
	0x01, 0x00, 4, 'C', 'o', 'd', 'e',
};

int cp_i = 11;
FILE *cout;

void fputc16(uint16_t in, FILE *out) {
	fputc(in >> 8, out); fputc(in & 0xFF, out);
}

uint16_t add_utf8(const char *string) {
	size_t len = strlen(string);

	fputc(0x01, cout);
	fputc16(len, cout);

	fputs(string, cout);

	return cp_i++;
}

uint16_t add_string(const char *string) {
	uint16_t utf8 = add_utf8(string);

	fputc(0x08, cout);
	fputc16(utf8, cout);
	return cp_i++;
}

uint16_t add_name_and_type(const char *name, uint16_t type) {
	uint16_t namei = add_utf8(name);

	fputc(0x0C, cout);
	fputc16(namei, cout);
	fputc16(type, cout);
	
	return cp_i++;
}

uint16_t add_field(uint16_t class, const char *name, uint16_t type) {
	int nat = add_name_and_type(name, type);

	fputc(0x09, cout);
	fputc16(class, cout);
	fputc16(nat, cout);

	return cp_i++;
}

void make_flontainer(void) {
	cout = fopen("Flos.class", "w");

	class[9] = 1 + 10 + 5 * n_flos;

	for(int i = 0; i < sizeof(class); i++) {
		fputc(class[i], cout);
	}

	for(int i = 0; i < n_flos; i++) {
		int ref;

		char varbuf[16];
		snprintf(varbuf, 16, "flo%u", i);
		add_field(7, varbuf, 3);

		add_string(flos[i]);
	}

	fputc16(0x0001, cout);
	fputc16(0x0007, cout);
	fputc16(0x0006, cout);

	fputc16(0, cout);

	fputc16(n_flos, cout);
	for(int i = 0; i < n_flos; i++) {
		fputc16(0x0001, cout);
		fputc16(11 + i * 5, cout);
		fputc16(3, cout);
		fputc16(0, cout);
	}

	fputc16(1, cout);
	fputc16(0x0001, cout);
	fputc16(4, cout);
	fputc16(5, cout);
	fputc16(1, cout);
	fputc16(10, cout);
	fputc16(0, cout);
	fputc16(17 + n_flos * 6, cout);
	fputc16(2, cout);
	fputc16(1, cout);
	fputc16(0, cout);
	fputc16(5 + n_flos * 6, cout);
	fputc(0x2A, cout);
	fputc(0xB7, cout); fputc16(0x0009, cout);
	for(int i = 0; i < n_flos; i++) {
		fputc(0x2A, cout);
		fputc(0x12, cout); fputc(15 + 5 * i, cout);
		fputc(0xB5, cout); fputc16(13 + 5 * i, cout);
	}
	fputc(0xB1, cout);

	fputc16(0, cout);
	fputc16(0, cout);

	fputc16(0, cout);

	fclose(cout);
}

const char *printer = "\
import java.lang.reflect.Field;\n\
\n\
public class Printer {\n\
	public static void print() throws Exception {\n\
		Flos floContainer = new Flos();\n\
		Field[] flos = floContainer.getClass().getFields();\n\
\n\
		for(Field flo : flos) {\n\
			System.out.println(flo.getName() + \": \" + flo.get(floContainer));\n\
		}\n\
	}\n\
}\n";

void make_printer(void) {
	FILE *out = fopen("Printer.java", "w");
	fputs(printer, out);
	fclose(out);

	system("javac Printer.java");
}

void print_flos(void) {
	JNIEnv *env;
	JavaVMInitArgs args;

	memset(&args, 0, sizeof(JavaVMInitArgs));
	args.version = JNI_VERSION_1_6;

	JavaVM *jvm;
	JNI_CreateJavaVM(&jvm, (void**)&env, &args);

	jclass printer = (*env)->FindClass(env, "Printer");
	jmethodID print = (*env)->GetStaticMethodID(env, printer, "print", "()V");
	(*env)->CallStaticVoidMethod(env, printer, print);
}

int main(void) {
	make_flontainer();
	make_printer();
	print_flos();

	return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}

Fußnoten

1) Anmerkung zu: "Dieses Perl (*duck*) kann ja keiner lesen!"

Stimmt doch gar nicht! Ist ganz einfach:

map printf("%s = %s\n", [flo0..flo5]->[$_], [dividuum, syb, fiji, flowhase, florolf, FlorianJW]->[$_]), 0..$#{@{[flo0..flo5]}};

(Kommentar von mgr: Genau, "0..$#{@{[flo0..flo5]}}" ... q.e.d. Danke für das gute Beispiel. Aber ernsthaft, es ging hier eben gerade *nicht* um Einzeiler, die will niemand.)


Und auch in python kann man Einzeiler schreiben:

print "\n".join(["%s = %s" % (k, v) for k, v in {"flo0":"dividuum", "flo1":"syb", "flo2":"fiji", "flo3":"flowhase","flo4":"florolf", "flo5":"FlorianJW"}.items()])