Timon Gehr
Posted in reply to Zach Tollen
| On 10.04.22 02:04, Zach Tollen wrote:
> On Saturday, 9 April 2022 at 17:22:38 UTC, Timon Gehr wrote:
>> Your proposal is not simpler.
>
> It is simpler.
If `@system` and `__metadata` are separate annotations, you get:
- `@system` rules
- `__metadata` rules
If you conflate them, you get:
- `@system` rules
- `__metadata` rules
- Weird interactions between the rules
- Additional arbitrary rules to be able to pretend the rules for the different annotations are compatible anyway
The additional rules and weird interactions are what's causing complexity, in addition to the misnamed qualifier and the significantly enhanced area of contact between D users and inherent `__metadata` weirdness.
> The only question is whether that simplicity comes at too high a cost.
> ...
If "simplicity" is causing costs, you are probably doing it wrong. Don't try to make things "simpler" than they are. It's a source of complexity and further ad-hoc patches.
>> Your proposal fails to meet your own standards.
>
> I don't know if it meets my standards or not. I would need an example where a variable which was either explicitly marked, or inferred `@system`, and implemented as desired with that label, then changed its behavior as a result of also implicitly having the privileges of `__mutable`.
>
It's not a privilege if it's undesirable. Also, you have been given multiple examples by now.
(You removed relevant context here.)
>> I see what you did there. I can do that too: Clearly you think that simplicity and expressiveness are both monotone functions of the number of attributes that are in the language. If what you say were true, we should conflate @safe and pure, as well as @nogc and nothrow because that would be "simpler". That's ridiculous!
>
> No I'm saying that simplicity and expressiveness are tradeoffs.
I was objecting to your setting up of a straw man that you then proceeded to attack. I then simply demonstrated my ability to do the same, expecting it might sway you as you seem to enjoy that kind of reasoning yourself. Unfortunately this has not worked out.
In any case, there are very simple systems that are very expressive. You want to be in that quadrant.
> The Go language, for example, traded a lot of expressiveness for simplicity. That doesn't make it bad language design.
I don't think this is entirely the case. They made some miscalculations early on and are now left with a language that is neither as simple nor as expressive as it should have been, nor as orthogonal as they claim.
> It means they weighed the pros and the cons, and they made a decision.
> ...
It's probably one level further away from that. They didn't spend a lot of effort to make a good language. They just spent vastly more time writing the compiler and libraries and my understanding is they did a pretty decent job there. Also, perhaps they actively wanted to avoid having a cerebral community that cares about abstract things such as PL theory. (There was a year-long active hostility towards potentially simple things such as generics in the Go community. You can draw your own conclusions.)
>>> The use cases of DIP1035, for the most part, are a strict subset of the uses of `__mutable`/`__metadata`.
>>
>> ???
>
> All `__metadata` variables qualify as DIP1035 `@system`. If you added `@system` to any instance of `__metadata`, it would have no effect.
Granted. Now you have shown "var is `__metadata`" => "var is `@system`", but that's not some sort of magical relationship between the qualifiers. There are multiple reasons why variables might by `@system` as it just collects every source of unsafety. `__metadata` is a new such source that we are considering adding to the language.
However, your claim above was the exact opposite: "var is @system" => "var is __metadata". As you said it is even a _strict subset_, you additionally claim that there are use cases where variables should be `__metadata` but not `@system`.
You seem to be contradicting yourself. It's either bad logic or bad communication.
> Therefore, if only `__metadata` were implemented, users could utilize it to achieve the intended goals of DIP1035.
No, because DIP1035 does not alter variable types in any way. You could similarly say: "Just initialize your variables with unsafe values and get rid of the need for a `@system` annotation." This is however not a simplification. The compiler still needs to track all that and making it part of the notation makes it simpler to understand.
> (Just allow them to mark it wherever they wanted instead of confining it to aggregate members, even though most of the use cases are in fact aggregate members.)
This is not a complete specification...
> The question is simply whether additionally being able to violate the type system would cause intractable problems.
No, not at all. Given that you apparently dismissed all the evidence in this thread as "tractable problems", your standard is way off in my opinion. E.g., I would similarly not run into _intractable_ problems if I chopped one of my arms off. That does not make it any less stupid even though one arm is clearly simpler than two arms. It would however not simplify my life.
You are basically stating that you will not move away from your position, no matter what. Digging in like that is not healthy, and this proposal is not actually worth spending time on, neither yours nor mine.
> I don't know. I suspect that almost all use cases of `@system` are mutable to begin with. And if they weren't, I would have to look the workarounds, to see if issues of having undesired `__metadata` functionality caused more pain than the simplicity of using only one keyword merited.
> ...
You keep claiming it's simpler. It's not. You are chasing after a prize that's not actually worth anything because you are using some useless, tunnel-vision notion of simplicity that only considers one (very unimportant) aspect of what potentially makes a language simple.
I would not chop off my arm even if someone offered to buy my house for one dollar in exchange, even though one dollar is a very simple amount. Avoiding that kind of "trade-off" should not be controversial.
>> So your proposal is...
>
> My proposal is to take everything DIP1035 marks or infers as `@system` and extend `__metadata` functionality to it.
I see, so if a module-scope variable is inferred `@system`, you will get an error because `__metadata` has been applied to a non-member variable. (I get that you state at other places you don't want it to work that way, but given that you seem to be unable to simply state what your proposal is, it's unlikely to actually be all that simple.)
> This may sound dangerous.
Primarily it sounds utterly pointless. All the reasoning about why it's "dangerous" is only required because you refuse to accept that it's pointless.
> The logic is simply that this is `@system` code, and `@system` code is dangerous.
Given your own standards of evidence, you will have to do much better than that. Please tell me how having separate `@system` and `__metadata` will cause intractable pain, suffering and ultimately end civilization as we know it. If you can't do that in a way that satisfies me, I will dismiss everything you say.
> But it is also powerful. That's the overarching idea. Both dangerous and powerful. (D should also be working towards `@safe` by default, of course.)
>
> Again, the only question is whether having `__metadata` functionality will cause intractable pain to the use cases of `@system` which don't require it.
> ...
I really don't understand why you are willing to suffer everything short of "intractable pain" for this issue.
>> In any case, even if your proposal was simple to state formally, it would still lead to really bad outcomes.
>
> The difference between us is that you are sure of that, and I am not.
> ...
I wouldn't say that's the whole difference.
> ...
>
> The solution to our debate — insofar as my claims deserve any merit at all — is to implement both DIP1035 and the `__metadata` DIP, with the additional requirement that all uses of `__metadata` be marked `@system` as well.
Not much point in that, it's just more line noise.
> Semantically, it would change nothing, and it would actually be easier to understand for newcomers.
> ...
Newcomers will not have to learn about `__metadata` or `@system` variables for a pretty long time. Then they may come across `@system` variables at some point, and finally, some further minority of D programmers will actually need to significantly concern themselves with `__metadata` rules.
If you keep the qualifiers separate, the meaning of `@system` is simple and intuitive and nobody who would not otherwise need to will have to concern themselves with `__metadata`. That's a much better proposition for newcomers than arbitrary conflation.
> Then, five years later, to test my theory, add a compiler switch `preview=deprecate__metadata`, put the `__metadata` functionality into the `@system`, and make `__metadata` a no-op.
>
> If nothing breaks, I was right. If something breaks, and the workarounds aren't seamless, then you were right.
>
...
In other words, you will just move the goalposts until you can claim you were right. Maybe you should care less about having been right in the past and more about being right in the future. Note that in my very first debate on this forum, I admitted that I had been wrong and that Andrei was right. For me, this is not about being right, it's about not having to go through the hassle of switching programming languages. I don't enjoy pointless debate, but weird language rules make it harder to justify why I am even using D. I need it to look like things are getting better (which generally they have been over the past 10 years), not worse.
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