#lang racket ;;; dds/utils ;;; Various utilities. (require graph (for-syntax syntax/parse racket/list)) (provide ;; Functions (contract-out [eval-with (-> variable-mapping? any/c any)] [extract-symbols (-> any/c list?)] [any->string (-> any/c string?)] [stringify-variable-mapping (-> variable-mapping? string-variable-mapping?)] [string->any (-> string? any/c)] [read-org-table (-> string? (listof any/c))] [unstringify-pairs (-> (listof (general-pair/c string? any/c)) (listof (general-pair/c symbol? any/c)))] [read-org-variable-mapping (-> string? variable-mapping?)] [update-vertices/unweighted (-> graph? (-> any/c any/c) graph?)] [update-graph (->* (graph?) (#:v-func (-> any/c any/c) #:e-func (-> any/c any/c)) graph?)] [pretty-print-set (-> generic-set? string?)]) ;; Contracts (contract-out [variable-mapping? contract?] [string-variable-mapping? contract?] [general-pair/c (-> contract? contract? contract?)]) ;; Syntax auto-hash-ref/explicit auto-hash-ref/: sgfy unorg dotit) ;;; =================== ;;; HashTable Injection ;;; =================== ;;; This section of the file contains some utilities to streamline the ;;; usage of hash tables mapping symbols to values. The goal is ;;; essentially to avoid having to write explicit hash-ref calls. ;;; A variable mapping is a hash table mapping symbols to values. (define (variable-mapping? dict) (hash/c symbol? any/c)) ;;; Given a (HashTable Symbol a) and a sequence of symbols, binds ;;; these symbols to the values they are associated to in the hash ;;; table, then puts the body in the context of these bindings. ;;; ;;; > (let ([ht #hash((a . 1) (b . 2))]) ;;; (auto-hash-ref/explicit (ht a b) (+ a (* 2 b)))) ;;; 5 ;;; ;;; Note that only one expression can be supplied in the body. (define-syntax (auto-hash-ref/explicit stx) (syntax-parse stx [(_ (ht:id xs:id ...) body:expr) #`(let #,(for/list ([x (syntax->list #'(xs ...))]) #`[#,x (hash-ref ht '#,x)]) body)])) ;;; Given an expression and a (HashTable Symbol a), looks up the ;;; symbols with a leading semicolon and binds them to the value they ;;; are associated to in the hash table. ;;; ;;; > (let ([ht #hash((a . 1) (b . 2))]) ;;; (auto-hash-ref/: ht (+ :a (* 2 :b)))) ;;; 5 ;;; ;;; Note that the symbol :a is matched to the key 'a in the hash ;;; table. ;;; ;;; Note that only one expression can be supplied in the body. (define-syntax (auto-hash-ref/: stx) (syntax-parse stx [(_ ht:id body) (let* ([names/: (collect-colons (syntax->datum #'body))]) #`(let #,(for/list ([x names/:]) ;; put x in the same context as body #`[#,(datum->syntax #'body x) (hash-ref ht '#,(strip-colon x))]) body))])) ;;; The helper functions for auto-hash-ref/:. (begin-for-syntax ;; Collect all the symbols starting with a colon in datum. (define (collect-colons datum) (remove-duplicates (flatten (for/list ([token datum]) (cond [(symbol? token) (let ([name (symbol->string token)]) (if (eq? #\: (string-ref name 0)) token '()))] [(list? token) (collect-colons token)] [else '()]))))) ;; Strip the leading colon off x. (define (strip-colon x) (let ([x-str (symbol->string x)]) (if (eq? #\: (string-ref x-str 0)) (string->symbol (substring x-str 1)) x)))) ;;; Temporarily injects the mappings from the given hash table as ;;; bindings in a namespace including racket/base and then evaluates ;;; the expression. ;;; ;;; > (let ([ht #hash((a . 1) (b . 1))]) ;;; (eval-with ht '(+ b a 1))) ;;; 3 ;;; ;;; The local bindings from the current lexical scope are not ;;; conserved. Therefore, the following outputs an error about a ;;; missing identifier: ;;; ;;; > (let ([ht #hash((a . 1) (b . 1))] ;;; [z 1]) ;;; (eval-with ht '(+ b z a 1))) ;;; (define (eval-with ht expr) (parameterize ([current-namespace (make-base-namespace)]) (for ([(x val) ht]) (namespace-set-variable-value! x val)) (eval expr))) ;;; Same as eval-with, but returns only the first value produced by ;;; the evaluated expression. (define (eval-with1 ht expr) (let ([vals (call-with-values (λ () (eval-with ht expr)) (λ vals vals))]) (car vals))) ;;; ============================== ;;; Analysis of quoted expressions ;;; ============================== ;;; Produces a list of symbols appearing in the quoted expression ;;; passed in the first argument. (define (extract-symbols form) (match form [(? symbol?) (list form)] [(? list?) (flatten (for/list ([x form]) (extract-symbols x)))] [else '()])) ;;; ========================= ;;; Interaction with Org-mode ;;; ========================= ;;; Org-mode supports laying out the output of code blocks as tables, ;;; which is very practical for various variable mappings (e.g., ;;; states). However, when the hash table maps variables to lists, ;;; Org-mode will create a column per list element, which may or may ;;; not be the desired effect. In this section I define some ;;; utilities for nicer interoperation with Org-mode tables. I also ;;; define some shortcuts to reduce the number of words to type when ;;; using dds with Org-mode. See example.org for examples of usage. ;;; Converts any value to string. (define (any->string x) (with-output-to-string (λ () (display x)))) ;;; A string variable mapping is a mapping from variables to strings. (define (string-variable-mapping? dict) (hash/c symbol? string?)) ;;; Converts all the values of a variable mapping to string. (define (stringify-variable-mapping ht) (for/hash ([(key val) ht]) (values key (any->string val)))) ;;; A shortcut for variable-mapping-stingify. (define-syntax-rule (sgfy ht) (stringify-variable-mapping ht)) ;;; Reads any value from string. (define (string->any str) (with-input-from-string str (λ () (read)))) ;;; Reads a table from a string produced by Org-mode for a named ;;; table. See example.org for examples. (define (read-org-table str) (string->any str)) ;;; A contract allowing pairs constructed via cons or via list. (define (general-pair/c key-contract val-contract) (or/c (list/c key-contract val-contract) (cons/c key-contract val-contract))) ;;; Given a list of pairs of strings and some other values (possibly ;;; strings), converts the first element of each pair to a string, and ;;; reads the second element with string->any or keeps it as is if it ;;; is not a string. (define (unstringify-pairs pairs) (for/list ([p pairs]) (match p [(list key val) (cons (string->symbol key) (if (string? val) (string->any val) val))] [(cons key val) ; also handle improper pairs (cons (string->symbol key) (if (string? val) (string->any val) val))]))) ;;; Reads a variable mapping from a string, such as the one which ;;; Org-mode produces from tables. (define (read-org-variable-mapping str) (make-hash (unstringify-pairs (read-org-table str)))) ;;; A synonym for read-org-variable-mapping. (define-syntax-rule (unorg str) (read-org-variable-mapping str)) ;;; Typeset the graph via graphviz and display it. (define-syntax-rule (dotit gr) (display (graphviz gr))) ;;; ========================== ;;; Additional graph utilities ;;; ========================== ;;; Apply a transformation to every vertex in the unweighted graph, ;;; return the new graph. If the transformation function maps two ;;; vertices to the same values, these vertices will be merged in the ;;; resulting graph. The transformation function may be called ;;; multiple times for the same vertex. ;;; ;;; This function does not rely on rename-vertex!, so it can be used ;;; to permute vertex labels. (define (update-vertices/unweighted gr func) (unweighted-graph/directed (for/list ([e (in-edges gr)]) (match-let ([(list u v) e]) (list (func u) (func v)))))) ;;; Given a graph, apply a transformation v-func to every vertex label ;;; and, if the graph is a weighted graph, the transformation e-func ;;; to every edge label. Both transformations default to identity ;;; functions. If gr is an weighted graph, the result is a weighted ;;; graph. If gr is an unweighted graph, the result is an unweighted ;;; graph. (define (update-graph gr #:v-func [v-func identity] #:e-func [e-func identity]) (let ([edges (for/list ([e (in-edges gr)]) (match-let ([(list u v) e]) (if (unweighted-graph? gr) (list (v-func u) (v-func v)) (list (e-func (edge-weight gr u v)) (v-func u) (v-func v)))))]) (if (unweighted-graph? gr) (unweighted-graph/directed edges) (weighted-graph/directed edges)))) ;;; =============== ;;; Pretty printing ;;; =============== ;;; Pretty print a set by listing its elements in alphabetic order. (define (pretty-print-set s) (string-join (sort (set-map s any->string) string