Call-by-push-value is an evaluation strategy that determines when arguments to functions are evaluated. Call-by-value is what every mainstream language does: arguments are evaluated before the function is called. Call-by-name substitutes arguments directly into a function, so they may be evaluated multiple times or not at all. For example, the following pseudocode:

function foo(n, m) {
    sum = 0
    for i in 1 to 4 {
        sum = n + sum
    }
    if false {
        print(m)
    }
    print(sum)
}

foo({print("1"); 2}, {print("3"); 4})

evaluated with Call-by-Value prints:

1
3
8

evaluated with Call-by-Name prints:

1
1
1
1
8

Call-by-push-value combines both by having two “kinds” of parameters: values which are evaluated immediately (call-by-value), and computations which are substituted (call-by-name). So the following code:

function foo(value n, computation m) {
    sum = 0
    for i in 1 to 4 {
        sum = n + sum
    }
    if false {
        print(m)
    }
    print(sum)
}

foo({print("1"); 2}, {print("3"); 4})

would print

1
8

The reason call-by-push-value may be useful is because both call-by-name and call-by-value have their advantages, especially with side-effects. Besides enabling programmers to write both traditional functions and custom loops/conditionals, CBPV is particularly useful for an IR to generate efficient code.

Currently, Scala has syntactic sugar for by-name parameters, and some languages like Kotlin and Swift make zero-argument closure syntax very simple (which does allow custom loops and conditionals, though it’s debatable whether this is CBPV). Other languages like Rust and C have macros, which can emulate call-by-name, albeit not ideally (you have hygiene issues and duplicating syntax makes compilation slower). I don’t know of any mainstream work on CBPV in the IR side.

  • Turun@feddit.de
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    9 months ago

    Kinda, except if you pass a function pointer the compiler automatically inserts parentheses to call the function after pasting it in every required place. But the compiler does not do that when you pass an expression, non-function-pointer variable or literal.