10:36 AM
@MarkI @ShixinZeng Because functions will be able to have a "binding", and that binding is in a frame when a function runs, and the frame is threaded through the any-arrays in order to connect any relative words with that frame... the words can get back at the binding from the original FUNCTION! REBVAL.
Currently the binding is used only by definitional LEAVE and RETURN, whose archetypal form is a native. I have proposed, however, that this be used to link the function to an object, if the function is a method of that object.
This puts us into a situation though where someone in the process has to point out which words are relative to the function's binding and which are not. At what level is this implicit vs. explicit.
With mechanics how they are today, you'd have to build that single function body relative to a specific archetypal object layout. Imagining for a moment that we simply use refinements to indicate a request for the use of function-binding-relativity, my-method: [a] [a + /a], you couldn't relativize that against o1: make object! [a: 10 b: 20] as well as o2: make object [b: 20 a: 10] because the lookup would be different. Well...you can do it, just not efficiently.
Hence the MAKE FUNCTION! would have to be able to be parameterized with that archetypal object, from which instances are derived. By convention, we assume this would be done with something like METHOD, which would effectively do something like function/member [...] [...] self, picking up whatever the local meaning of SELF happened to be.
Under this strategy, if you only made one object, and used functions in it as done historically, it would still work. But if you derived from that object and didn't use METHOD, you wouldn't get the "voodoo" that happens today which would re-relativize.
Well, I guess there's no real harm in FUNCTION always picking up SELF for any relativizations. If it doesn't use it, and just picks up the user context or whatever, no harm done.
Though superficially the /a might seem like "this->a" in this strategy, it is not. If it were as simplistic as that, you couldn't pass things like /a to another function and have it look up right. Here, the binding is tagging along by way of the frame, which threads through the structure. So it's as good as any other binding.