Greetings,
I'm pleased to announce that my paper entitled "Method Combinators" has
been accepted to the next European Lisp Symposium, April 16-17,
Marbella, Spain. Please find the abstract below.
Method Combinators
In traditional object-oriented languages, the dynamic dispatch algorithm is
hardwired: for every polymorphic call, only the most specific method is
used. CLOS, the Common Lisp Object System, goes beyond the traditional
approach by providing an abstraction known as "method combinations": when
several methods are applicable, it is possible to select several of them,
decide in which order they will be called and how to combine their results,
essentially making the dynamic dispatch algorithm user-programmable.
Although a powerful abstraction, method combinations are under-specified
in the Common Lisp standard, and the MOP, the Meta-Object Protocol
underlying many implementations of CLOS, worsens the situation by either
contradicting it or providing unclear protocols. As a consequence, too
much freedom is granted to conforming implementations, the exact or
intended behavior of method combinations is unclear and not necessarily
coherent with the rest of CLOS.
In this paper, we provide a detailed analysis of the problems posed by
method combinations, the consequences of their lack of proper
specification in one particular implementation, and a MOP-based
extension called "method combinators", aiming at correcting these
problems and possibly offer new functionality.
--
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