EECS 321 Programming Languages: Homework 3

Part 1 – Functions that Accept Multiple Arguments

Start with the F1WAE interpreter (WITHOUT deferred substitution), and extend the implementation to support any number of arguments to a function (including zero), and any number of arguments (including zero) in a function application:

  <FunDef> = {deffun {<id> <id>*} <FnWAE>}
  <FnWAE> = <number>
          | {+ <FnWAE> <FnWAE>}
          | {- <FnWAE> <FnWAE>}
          | {with {<id> <FnWAE>} <FnWAE>}
          | <id>
          | {<id> <FnWAE>*}

Since you must change the F1WAE datatype, and since different people may change it in different ways, you must provide a parse function this time, which accepts a quoted expression and produces an FnWAE value. For parsing, assume that any symbol other than '+, '-, or 'with can be a function name for a function call. Also, you must provide a parse-defn function that takes one (quoted) deffun form and produces a FunDef value.

At run-time, a new error is now possible: function application with the wrong number of arguments. Your interp function should detect the mismatch and report an error that includes the words "wrong arity".

As with the interpreter from class, the free variable error is still also possible and must be detected. Your interp function should detect free variables and report an error that includes the word "free".

Your interpreter (and parser) will not be given any other kinds of errorneous programs.

Some examples:

  (test (interp (parse '{f 1 2})
                (list (parse-defn '{deffun {f x y} {+ x y}})))
        3)
  (test (interp (parse '{+ {f} {f}})
                (list (parse-defn '{deffun {f} 5})))
        10)
  (test/exn (interp (parse '{f 1})
                    (list (parse-defn '{deffun {f x y} {+ x y}})))
            "wrong arity")

  (test/exn (interp (parse '{with {x y} 1})
                    (list))
            "free")

A function would be ill-defined if two of its argument <id>s were the same. To prevent this problem, your parse-defn function should detect this problem and reports a "bad syntax" error. For example, (parse-defn '{deffun {f x x} x}) should report a "bad syntax" error, while (parse-defn '{deffun {f x y} x}) should produce a FunDef value.

If the list of definitions contains multiple definitions for the same function, use just the first one (ignoring the others).

Remember that the PLAI language provides the following useful function:


Last update: Saturday, October 3rd, 2015
robby@eecs.northwestern.edu