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Q: Confusion about The Reference Specification Type and GetValue in ECMAScript

JojiI been reading the ECMAScript spec these days and I am having trouble understanding how basic assignments happens - specifically what exactly we derive the actual value out of its Reference Specification Type via GetValue For example, we have let a = 5 let b = 6 a = b What happens for a=b is tha...

Do you understand what the reference b consists of? How the value is accessed should be quite clear then.
Does this or that help?
Since b is a variable, 6.1 will be executed: Return ? base.GetBindingValue(GetReferencedName(V), IsStrictReference(V)) . The result will be a number value.
@Bergi actually I am not sure what the reference consists of. If we have const a = {}, then GetValue(a) is going to give us the actual value i.e. the empty object or the pointer/reference that points to that empty object?
@FelixKling if b is not a primitive value, let's say it is an object {name: 'foo'}, then base.GetBindingValue(GetReferencedName(V), IsStrictReference(V)) will give us the actual value of the object or just the pointer/reference to that object?
@Joji Did you see where the Reference is constructed when evaluating the code a=b? Hint: 262.ecma-international.org/8.0/… 262.ecma-international.org/8.0/#sec-getidentifierreference
@Joji there is no "actual value", an object value is always a pointer to the collection of properties. There can be a Reference to the variable b, or there can be a Reference to a property of an object.
FWIW, I started working on something that would help answer questions like this (basically an executable version of the spec) but it's not ready yet :-/
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@FelixKling Isn't there a project already that translates ecmarkup into an engine implementation?
@Bergi: Is there? I know of github.com/engine262/engine262 but I don't think it's automatic (and it doesn't actually do what I want). If there is one I'd be curious to take a look at it. However, I have the translation part working, the UI is somehow more challenging...
@FelixKling It might be that one. Or maybe I remember github.com/jmdyck/ecmaspeak-py? Try asking around TC39
@Bergi "Did you see where the Reference is constructed when evaluating the code a=b" I thought when evaluating the code a=b the rhs b reference would be dereferenced by "GetValue" to get the value? Why is there referenced constructed? Refernece for which variable?
@Joji There are two references constructed, one for a and one for b, but ok let's talk about the right hand side only. So yes, when evaluating the expression "b" then first there is a reference to the variable constructed, and then GetValue is applied to the reference. I assume you saw those steps in the specification to be wondering about how GetValue works?
Thanks. I didn't know that a = b would first construct references for both sides - I guess my mental model is that a and b is the its reference. Clearly that's not what the spec says right? Yea so we evaluate expression b, the reference for b gets constructed as you said, then we call GetValue on it. My questions are: 1. assume b is just a string foo, how do we exactly arrive at that result where string foo gets returned by GetValue according to the spec? 2. My understanding is that PutValue only changes the binding between the value and the identifier...
... so there is no value actually that gets copied? It is the same 'foo' that gets binded to two different identifier right? but the implementation of the language can choose to actually copy the bits that make up the string foo from the memory chunk of b to the memory chunk of a. That's my understanding of where the spec ends and where the implementation starts.
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"my mental model is that a and b is the its reference" - sorry, I did not understand that sentence. "assume b is just a string foo" - not sure "is" is the right word here if we want to be precise. The variable named b holds the string value "foo". And GetValue returns that string value that is stored in the variable. How such a "string value" is implemented is indeed up to the implementation - it might be a whole "memory chunk", or it might just be a pointer to an interned string, or something else.
"PutValue only changes the binding between the value and the identifier so there is no value actually that gets copied?" - you mean that a binding is just a pointer to a value, and you never copy the value itself but just change the pointer to point elsewhere? Would you do that even for integer values, not for strings?
"my mental model is that a and b is the its reference" sorry that was badly worded. I meant that I thought a and b is always a reference - so there is no references gets constructed during the assignment - the reference is always there. And I understand that for small integer (smis) the implementation is different by using pointer tagging. But when I said "PutValue only changes the binding between the value and the identifier so there is no value actually that gets copied?" I wasn't trying to get the implementation level - I was just speaking at the level of the spec
Not sure what you mean by "always there". What exists before that code is evaluated are only the variables. Then when the code (the ExpressionStatement consisting of AssignmentExpression and so on, the whole parse tree of a=b;) is evaluated, the two References to the variables are constructed and used to describe where to read the value from and where to store it to. And at the spec level, the value that was stored in variable b before the assignment is stored in both variable a and b after the assignment, so surely it got "copied".
"And at the spec level, the value that was stored in variable b before the assignment is stored in both variable a and b after the assignment, so surely it got "copied"." Not sure what you mean by "store", according to the table of the reference, there is no [[value]] in it, so the value is not inside of the reference right? We can only use GetValue to get the value via the reference indirectly. The whole = operator in spec doesn't say anything about copy though, it seems like only the value gets bonded to to a different identifier. Could you point out where in spec the value is copied
I was not talking of storing something "in" the Reference, I was saying it's stored in the variable b. Or more precisely, in the binding for the name b of the declarative environment record - which the reference represents, and which PutValue will use (via SetMutableBinding). And yes, these are currently not written using record-field specifcation syntax, but that doesn't change the meaning.
"Could you point out where in spec the value is copied" - no, since the spec simply treats them all as values, with call-by-value semantics and an implicit copy whenever the value is used.
"with call-by-value semantics and an implicit copy whenever the value is used. " should we treat the "value" here as the actual value or a pointer other actual value? If you have a 100kb string as a value then I don't think we want to copy that string everytime we pass it around right? I thought the whole idea of having a Reference type is to introduce this separation between value and its reference - we have share value between references via SetMutableBinding so that the JS engine can implement every thing we declare on heap and have variables pointing to them.
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I mean actual value. A number value, a string value, an object (reference) value - no difference. How the engine optimises huge strings is irrelevant and not described by the specification.
"I thought the whole idea of having a Reference type is to introduce this separation between value and its reference" - no, absolutely not. References are never stored anywhere, they are always temporary. User code can never obtain them. They are a specification device used to describe how assignment, delete or typeof should behave, they basically are what you would call an lvalue in C. You might find some of my other answers relevant: stackoverflow.com/a/29353344/1048572 stackoverflow.com/a/51660217/1048572 stackoverflow.com/a/38444796/1048572
@Bergi nice looks like absolutely everything in my understanding about the spec is just wrong. I know that it is opaque to JS developers so we cannot directly interact with them or obtain them. But what's wrong with the idea of having the value and the reference separate? Should we treat them as one thing instead? If "idea of having a Reference type is to introduce this separation between value and its reference" is just plain wrong then you mean that in the spec there is no separation/indirection between the variable and its value? they are always the same thing?
"Or more precisely, in the binding for the name b of the declarative environment record - which the reference represents" so you mean that a reference represents the binding between an identifier i.e. a variable name and its value?
A value and a Reference surely are different things. But again, a Reference is not a value or does represent a value; it represents (and most importantly abstracts!) a location from which you can read a value or which you can write a value into, such as a variable (a binding in an environment record) or object property.
thanks! that is clear. It is really like a pointer right - "a location from which you can read a value or which you can write a value into". My understanding is that in most JS runtimes, e.g. v8, when you declare a variable with some value, that variable is always a pointer, not the value itself, the underlying value is on heap and the variable is just a pointer you use to get the value. And as you mentioned a object is just a collect of pointers/references. So I was trying to find if this is deep-rooted in the language spec. Also is there any good resources or articles that I can read to..
...better understand the spec. For example, you said that a reference is design to explain the behavior of how assignment, delete or typeof. Why doesn't this list also include initialization as in const a = {}. Is initialization different than assignment so we don't need to reference here? Also it seems like typeof and delete are the only two operations that can "touch" the reference - any other operations in JS would invoke GetValue/PutValue on a reference so it would throw errors when you are trying to access something non-existent but it is not the case with typeof and delete
"It is really like a pointer right" - yes, but only like one. It's not really implemented as a pointer in most cases. "in most JS runtimes, a variable is always a pointer" - no. A variable is the actual memory cell which holds the value. These cells are organised in scope structures and are located on the heap. "a object is just a collect of pointers/references" - no, an object is a pointer/reference to a collection of values. "Is initialization different than assignment so we don't need to reference here?" - yes.
"A variable is the actual memory cell which holds the value." I have read the source code of V8 and I know that the values are located on heap - but the variable you declared in JS are just pointers. "an object is a pointer/reference to a collection of values", actually if you have an object "{val: 'foo'}", the object itself does NOT have the string 'foo' in it, it only has the pointer that points to the string 'foo', the foo is allocated within that object. "Is initialization different than assignment so we don't need to reference here?" can you elaborate why they are different?
"yes, but only like one. It's not really implemented as a pointer in most cases." so in most cases how it is implemented exactly then if it is not a pointer?
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If you want to discuss the details of the V8 engine, I suggest you ask a new question about that - @jmrk is usually happy to answer. I can only speak about the ECMAScript specification.
18:28
Hey thanks for the reply. Learned a lot from you. if you don't mind me asking some more followup questions: 1. "It is really like a pointer right" - yes, but only like one. It's not really implemented as a pointer in most cases." So how exactly is it implemented in most cases? 2. "Is initialization different than assignment so we don't need to reference here?" - can I ask how initialization is different from assignment? Why is that the lhs of initialization doesn't invoke PutValue?

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