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:Author: Arne Döring :Version: |nimversion|
.. default-role:: code .. include:: rstcommon.rst .. contents::
"With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility." -- Spider Man's Uncle
This document is a tutorial about Nim's macro system. A macro is a function that is executed at compile-time and transforms a Nim syntax tree into a different tree.
Examples of things that can be implemented in macros:
An assert macro that prints both sides of a comparison operator, if
the assertion fails. myAssert(a == b)
is converted to
if a != b: quit($a " != " $b)
A debug macro that prints the value and the name of the symbol.
myDebugEcho(a)
is converted to echo "a: ", a
Symbolic differentiation of an expression.
diff(a*pow(x,3) + b*pow(x,2) + c*x + d, x)
is converted to
3*a*pow(x,2) + 2*b*x + c
The types of macro arguments have two faces. One face is used for
the overload resolution and the other face is used within the macro
body. For example, if macro foo(arg: int)
is called in an
expression foo(x)
, x
has to be of a type compatible to int, but
within the macro's body arg
has the type NimNode
, not int
!
Why it is done this way will become obvious later, when we have seen
concrete examples.
There are two ways to pass arguments to a macro, an argument can be
either typed
or untyped
.
Untyped macro arguments are passed to the macro before they are semantically checked. This means the syntax tree that is passed down to the macro does not need to make sense for Nim yet, the only limitation is that it needs to be parsable. Usually, the macro does not check the argument either but uses it in the transformation's result somehow. The result of a macro expansion is always checked by the compiler, so apart from weird error messages, nothing bad can happen.
The downside for an untyped
argument is that these do not play
well with Nim's overloading resolution.
The upside for untyped arguments is that the syntax tree is
quite predictable and less complex compared to its typed
counterpart.
For typed arguments, the semantic checker runs on the argument and
does transformations on it, before it is passed to the macro. Here
identifier nodes are resolved as symbols, implicit type
conversions are visible in the tree as calls, templates are
expanded, and probably most importantly, nodes have type information.
Typed arguments can have the type typed
in the arguments list.
But all other types, such as int
, float
or MyObjectType
are typed arguments as well, and they are passed to the macro as a
syntax tree.
Static arguments are a way to pass values as values and not as syntax
tree nodes to a macro. For example for macro foo(arg: static[int])
in the expression foo(x)
, x
needs to be an integer constant,
but in the macro body arg
is just like a normal parameter of type
int
.
import std/macros
macro myMacro(arg: static[int]): untyped =
echo arg # just an int (7), not `NimNode`
myMacro(1 + 2 * 3)
It is possible to pass the last argument of a call expression in a
separate code block with indentation. For example, the following code
example is a valid (but not a recommended) way to call echo
:
echo "Hello ":
let a = "Wor"
let b = "ld!"
a & b
For macros this way of calling is very useful; syntax trees of arbitrary complexity can be passed to macros with this notation.
In order to build a Nim syntax tree one needs to know how Nim source
code is represented as a syntax tree, and how such a tree needs to
look like so that the Nim compiler will understand it. The nodes of the
Nim syntax tree are documented in the macros module.
But a more interactive way to explore the Nim
syntax tree is with macros.treeRepr
, it converts a syntax tree
into a multi-line string for printing on the console. It can be used
to explore how the argument expressions are represented in tree form
and for debug printing of generated syntax tree. dumpTree
is a
predefined macro that just prints its argument in a tree representation,
but does nothing else. Here is an example of such a tree representation:
dumpTree:
var mt: MyType = MyType(a:123.456, b:"abcdef")
# output:
# StmtList
# VarSection
# IdentDefs
# Ident "mt"
# Ident "MyType"
# ObjConstr
# Ident "MyType"
# ExprColonExpr
# Ident "a"
# FloatLit 123.456
# ExprColonExpr
# Ident "b"
# StrLit "abcdef"
The first thing that a macro should do with its arguments is to check
if the argument is in the correct form. Not every type of wrong input
needs to be caught here, but anything that could cause a crash during
macro evaluation should be caught and create a nice error message.
macros.expectKind
and macros.expectLen
are a good start. If
the checks need to be more complex, arbitrary error messages can
be created with the macros.error
proc.
macro myAssert(arg: untyped): untyped =
arg.expectKind nnkInfix
There are two ways to generate the code. Either by creating the syntax
tree with expressions that contain a lot of calls to newTree
and
newLit
, or with quote do:
expressions. The first option offers
the best low-level control for the syntax tree generation, but the
second option is much less verbose. If you choose to create the syntax
tree with calls to newTree
and newLit
the macro
macros.dumpAstGen
can help you with the verbosity.
quote do:
allows you to write the code that you want to generate literally.
Backticks are used to insert code from NimNode
symbols into the
generated expression.
```nim test = "nim c $1" import std/macros macro a(i) = quote do:
let `i` = 0
a b doAssert b == 0
A custom prefix operator can be defined whenever backticks are needed.
```nim test = "nim c $1"
import std/macros
macro a(i) = quote("@") do:
assert @i == 0
let b = 0
a b
The injected symbol needs accent quoted when it resolves to a symbol.
```nim test = "nim c $1" import std/macros macro a(i) = quote("@") do:
let `@i` = 0
a b doAssert b == 0
Make sure to inject only symbols of type `NimNode` into the generated syntax
tree. You can use `newLit` to convert arbitrary values into
expressions trees of type `NimNode` so that it is safe to inject
them into the tree.
```nim test = "nim c $1"
import std/macros
type
MyType = object
a: float
b: string
macro myMacro(arg: untyped): untyped =
var mt: MyType = MyType(a:123.456, b:"abcdef")
# ...
let mtLit = newLit(mt)
result = quote do:
echo `arg`
echo `mtLit`
myMacro("Hallo")
The call to myMacro
will generate the following code:
echo "Hallo"
echo MyType(a: 123.456'f64, b: "abcdef")
To give a starting point to writing macros we will show now how to
implement the myAssert
macro mentioned earlier. The first thing to
do is to build a simple example of the macro usage, and then just
print the argument. This way it is possible to get an idea of what a
correct argument should look like.
```nim test = "nim c $1" import std/macros
macro myAssert(arg: untyped): untyped =
echo arg.treeRepr
let a = 1 let b = 2
myAssert(a != b)
Infix
Ident "!="
Ident "a"
Ident "b"
From the output, it is possible to see that the argument is an infix
operator (node kind is "Infix"), as well as that the two operands are
at index 1 and 2. With this information, the actual macro can be
written.
```nim test = "nim c $1"
import std/macros
macro myAssert(arg: untyped): untyped =
# all node kind identifiers are prefixed with "nnk"
arg.expectKind nnkInfix
arg.expectLen 3
# operator as string literal
let op = newLit(" " & arg[0].repr & " ")
let lhs = arg[1]
let rhs = arg[2]
result = quote do:
if not `arg`:
raise newException(AssertionDefect,$`lhs` & `op` & $`rhs`)
let a = 1
let b = 2
myAssert(a != b)
myAssert(a == b)
This is the code that will be generated. To debug what the macro
actually generated, the statement echo result.repr
can be used, in
the last line of the macro. It is also the statement that has been
used to get this output.
if not (a != b):
raise newException(AssertionDefect, $a & " != " & $b)
Macros are very powerful. A piece of good advice is to use them as little as possible, but as much as necessary. Macros can change the semantics of expressions, making the code incomprehensible for anybody who does not know exactly what the macro does with it. So whenever a macro is not necessary and the same logic can be implemented using templates or generics, it is probably better not to use a macro. And when a macro is used for something, the macro should better have a well-written documentation. For all the people who claim to write only perfectly self-explanatory code: when it comes to macros, the implementation is not enough for documentation.
Since macros are evaluated in the compiler in the NimVM, macros share all the limitations of the NimVM. They have to be implemented in pure Nim code. Macros can start external processes on the shell, but they cannot call C functions except those that are built in the compiler.
This tutorial can only cover the basics of the macro system. There are macros out there that could be an inspiration for you of what is possible with it.
In the Nim standard library, the strformat
library provides a
macro that parses a string literal at compile time. Parsing a string
in a macro like here is generally not recommended. The parsed AST
cannot have type information, and parsing implemented on the VM is
generally not very fast. Working on AST nodes is almost always the
recommended way. But still strformat
is a good example for a
practical use case for a macro that is slightly more complex than the
assert
macro.
Ast Pattern Matching is a macro library to aid in writing complex macros. This can be seen as a good example of how to repurpose the Nim syntax tree with new semantics.
This project has a working Nim to GLSL compiler written entirely in macros. It scans recursively through all used function symbols to compile them so that cross library functions can be executed on the GPU.