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Implements -> and ->> from Clojure, as well as several expansions on the idea.

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Arrows

Implements threading macros, inspired by Clojure (both core and the swiss-arrows library).

This is an ASDF system providing the package arrows. Its home is at https://gitlab.com/Harleqin/arrows, with a mirror at https://github.com/Harleqin/arrows.

Overview

You get:

  • the basic “thrushing” arrows -> and ->>,
  • “diamond” arrows -<> and -<>>,
  • binding arrow as->,
  • “maybe” arrows some-> and some->>,
  • conditional arrows cond-> and cond->>, and
  • “double arrow cancellers” ->* and as->*.

As far as I see, ->* and as->* are new. Their purpose is to be nested in other threading forms to temporarily supplant their behaviour (see “Nesting” below).

Other arrow libraries

Notable differences to Clojure and swiss-arrows

  • Cond-> and cond->> use one additional paren nesting for the clauses, so that each clause can contain multiple forms to thread/execute.

  • -<> and -<>> do not support literals to insert the <> placeholder. The placeholder really only works at the outermost level of the threaded forms. The reason for this is mostly that Common Lisp does not have so many literal syntax elements (by default) where it would make sense to do this kind of insertion. If you do need anything fancy, use as-> or as->* for a real lexical binding.

Notable differences to arrow-macros

  • Cond-> and cond->> use one additional paren nesting for the clauses, so that each clause can contain multiple forms to thread/execute.

  • -<> and -<>> do not use a code walker to find out whether a placeholder is present in the next threaded form. The placeholder only works at the outermost level of the threaded forms. This reduces the dependencies of arrows (there are none at present). Instead, the recommendation is to use binding arrows as-> or as->*, possibly nested (see below).

  • There is no some-<> nor some-<>> yet. Instead, you can use nested as-> or as->* forms (see below).

Nesting

One useful idiom is to nest these arrows. The basic example is to use ->> inside ->:

(-> deeply-nested-plist
    (getf :foo)
    (getf :bar)
    (->> (mapcar #'reverse)))

This inspired the discovery of ->*, which enables the inverse nesting:

(->> deeply-nested-alist
     (assoc :foo)
     cdr
     (assoc :bar)
     cdr
     (->* (mod 3))
     (expt 2))

Generally useful for overriding defaults are as-> and as->*:

(-> 3
    (as-> $
          (< x $ y))
    not)

(some->> 15
         (as->* $
                (progn
                  (format t debug-formatter $)
                  $))
         (/ 75))

However, don't overdo it! This quickly leads to an unreadable mess. You may well be better off with a few explicit let bindings.

Documentation

-> initial-form &rest forms => results

[macro] Inserts INITIAL-FORM as first argument into the first of FORMS, the result into the next, etc., before evaluation. FORMS are treated as list designators.

->> initial-form &rest forms => results

[macro] Like ->, but the forms are inserted as last argument instead of first.

->* &rest forms => results

[macro] Like ->, but the last form is used as initial form, then the remainung forms as in ->. This is intended for inversing the default in a ->> form.

-<> initial-form &rest forms => results

[macro] Like ->, but if a form in FORMS has one or more symbols named <> as top-level element, each such symbol is substituted by the primary result of the form accumulated so far, instead of it being inserted as first argument. Also known as diamond wand.

-<>> initial-form &rest forms => results

[macro] Like -<>, but if a form in FORMS has no symbols named <> as top-level element, insertion is done like in ->>. Also known as diamond spear.

as-> initial-form var &rest forms => results

[macro] Binds INITIAL-FORM to VAR, then successively each of FORMS to VAR, finally returns the last value of VAR.

as->* var &rest forms => results

[macro] Shorthand for the combination of ->* and as->: the last form is used for initial binding, then the remaining forms used as in as->. This is intended for overriding the default in a ->> form.

some-> initial-form &rest forms => results

[macro] Like ->, but short-circuits to nil as soon as either INITIAL-FORM or any of FORMS return nil. This is like all these forms are lifted to the maybe monad.

some->> initial-form &rest forms => results

[macro] Like some->, but with insertion behaviour as in ->>.

cond-> initial-form &rest clauses => results

[macro] CLAUSES is a list of clauses similar to COND clauses, each clause comprising first a test form, then a body of further forms. Cond-> evaluates INITIAL-FORM to a value, then for each clause whose test evaluates to true, pipes (as in ->) the value through each form in the body of the clause. Note that unlike in COND, there is no short-circuiting: each clause gets tested regardless of the outcome of the clauses before.

cond->> initial-form &rest clauses => results

[macro] Like cond->, but with insertion behaviour as in ->>.

Examples

(-> 3
    /)  ; insert into designated list (/)
=> 1/3

(-> 3
    (expt 2))  ; insert as first argument
=> 9

(->> 3
     (expt 2))  ; insert as last argument
=> 8

(-<>> (list 1 2 3)
      (remove-if #'oddp <> :count 1 :from-end t) ; substitute <>
      (reduce #'+)                               ; insert last
      /)                                         ; list designator
=> 1/3

(let ((x 3))
  (-<> (incf x)     ; (let ((r (incf x)))
       (+ <> <>)))  ;   (+ r r))
=> 8

(->> 3
     (/ 12)         ; (/ 12 3) => 4
     (->* (/ 2)))   ; (/ 4 2)  => 2
=> 2

(flet ((say (n)
         (cond->> nil
                  ((zerop (mod n 3)) (cons "Fizz"))
                  ((zerop (mod n 5)) (cons "Buzz"))
                  (t (->* (or (list (princ-to-string n))))
                     reverse
                     (apply #'concatenate 'string)))))
  (mapcar #'say '(9 10 11 12 13 14 15)))
=> ("Fizz" "Buzz" "11" "Fizz" "13" "14" "FizzBuzz")

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Implements -> and ->> from Clojure, as well as several expansions on the idea.

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