1. Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by kbochert at ix.netcom.com Feb 17, 2002
- 513 views
-------Phoenix-Boundary-07081998- A personal opinion on the inadvisability of 'exit(n)'. The problem of breaking out of nested loops is real but exit(n) is a bit of a write-only way of handling it. Ask yourself- Is the purpose of exit(N) to break out of N loops, or is it to get to a specific location in the code (which happens to be at the end of a specific loop). A loop that includes an exit(n) statement is making assumptions about the structure of its environment. Finding the target of exit(3) can be difficult, involving the counting, both up and down, of 2 kinds of loops, possibly over several pages of code. You can't even use your editor to do the search! Changing the nesting structure of the code can require fixing exit() statements. The typical use of exit(N) would be when some significant milestone in the processing occured: 'error_found', or 'start_next_step'. 'exit(N)' gives no clue. Goto is more semanticly meaningful, more versatile, runs faster and its target is more easily found. Karl Bochert -------Phoenix-Boundary-07081998---
2. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by Derek Parnell <ddparnell at bigpond.com> Feb 17, 2002
- 475 views
>----- Original Message ----- >From: <kbochert at ix.netcom.com> >To: "EUforum" <EUforum at topica.com> >Sent: Monday, February 18, 2002 4:37 AM >Subject: Exit(n) vs. goto > > >A personal opinion on the inadvisability of 'exit(n)'. > >The problem of breaking out of nested loops is real >but exit(n) is a bit of a write-only way of >handling it. > >Ask yourself- Is the purpose of exit(N) >to break out of N loops, or is it to get to >a specific location in the code (which happens >to be at the end of a specific loop). > >A loop that includes an exit(n) statement is making >assumptions about the structure of its environment. > >Finding the target of exit(3) can be difficult, >involving the counting, both up and down, of 2 >kinds of loops, possibly over several pages of >code. You can't even use your editor to do the >search! > >Changing the nesting structure of the code >can require fixing exit() statements. > >The typical use of exit(N) would be when some >significant milestone in the processing occured: >'error_found', or 'start_next_step'. 'exit(N)' >gives no clue. > Up to this point in your argument I agree. >Goto is more semanticly meaningful, more >versatile, runs faster and its target is more >easily found. This is where we part company. If we use "semanticly" to mean that it conveys meaning, then GOTO is in fact less semantically meaningful than EXIT. My reasoning is that GOTO means that the logic flow jumps somewhere into the code. We don't know where (in a logical sense) until we read and possible examine the program. Where as EXIT also means that the logic flow jumps, but we know exactly where - the next statement after the looping logic we are in. We don't have to examine the code. We already know which lines it jumps over. Granted, in a physical sense, we still have to use our eyes to find that 'next statement', but in a logic sense, it is total clear. The problems with EXIT(N) are as you have said earlier. The issue is with the (N) part. But if we go back to what EXIT means, 'leaves the loop', then to extend this into a facility to leave a nested loop, it might be better to identify which loop you are trying to leave. With the(N) method there are problems, the chief being that when you (or others) modify the code, they must always recheck that the (N) still refers to the correct nesting depth. Another method of identify the loop is to give it a name, which of course doesn't change as you modify the code in future. Then the EXIT statement nominates the name of the loop it wants to exit. In this way we get the semantic benefit (EXIT means leave a loop), and maintenance benefit (the loop's name doesn't change unless we specifically change it). As for execution speed, it should be identical to GOTO as it does the same sort of processing. And it avoids the potential problem of jumping to arbitrary code location that is NOT the end of a loop. Also with GOTO one must seek its target when looking through the code. It could be earlier or later than the loop we are in. I wouldn't want to introduce a syntax for this concept yet but I'm sure the example below is self-explanitory... Scans:for i = 1 to length(s) do c = getc(h) while find(c, charlist) do if c = AbortCode then exit (ScanS) end if RoutineA(c) end while RoutineB() end Scans (I'd also like to get rid of this silly 'end for', 'end while', 'end procedure', 'end function' stuff. Just a maintenance headache and serves no useful purpose, but that's another issue ) ----- cheers, Derek.
3. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by Euler German <efgerman at myrealbox.com> Feb 17, 2002
- 577 views
Hello Derek: On 18 Feb 2002, at 7:30, Derek Parnell wrote: > > >----- Original Message ----- > >From: <kbochert at ix.netcom.com> > >To: "EUforum" <EUforum at topica.com> > >Sent: Monday, February 18, 2002 4:37 AM > >Subject: Exit(n) vs. goto > > > > >A personal opinion on the inadvisability of 'exit(n)'. > > > >The problem of breaking out of nested loops is real > >but exit(n) is a bit of a write-only way of > >handling it. > > > >Ask yourself- Is the purpose of exit(N) > >to break out of N loops, or is it to get to > >a specific location in the code (which happens > >to be at the end of a specific loop). > > > >A loop that includes an exit(n) statement is making > >assumptions about the structure of its environment. > > > >Finding the target of exit(3) can be difficult, > >involving the counting, both up and down, of 2 > >kinds of loops, possibly over several pages of > >code. You can't even use your editor to do the > >search! > > > >Changing the nesting structure of the code > >can require fixing exit() statements. > > > >The typical use of exit(N) would be when some > >significant milestone in the processing occured: > >'error_found', or 'start_next_step'. 'exit(N)' > >gives no clue. > > > > Up to this point in your argument I agree. > > >Goto is more semanticly meaningful, more > >versatile, runs faster and its target is more > >easily found. > > This is where we part company. If we use "semanticly" to mean that it > conveys meaning, then GOTO is in fact less semantically meaningful than > EXIT. My reasoning is that GOTO means that the logic flow jumps > somewhere into the code. We don't know where (in a logical sense) until > we read and possible examine the program. Where as EXIT also means that > the logic flow jumps, but we know exactly where - the next statement > after the looping logic we are in. We don't have to examine the code. We > already know which lines it jumps over. Granted, in a physical sense, we > still have to use our eyes to find that 'next statement', but in a logic > sense, it is total clear. > > The problems with EXIT(N) are as you have said earlier. The issue is > with the (N) part. But if we go back to what EXIT means, 'leaves the > loop', then to extend this into a facility to leave a nested loop, it > might be better to identify which loop you are trying to leave. With > the(N) method there are problems, the chief being that when you (or > others) modify the code, they must always recheck that the (N) still > refers to the correct nesting depth. > > Another method of identify the loop is to give it a name, which of > course doesn't change as you modify the code in future. Then the EXIT > statement nominates the name of the loop it wants to exit. In this way > we get the semantic benefit (EXIT means leave a loop), and maintenance > benefit (the loop's name doesn't change unless we specifically change > it). > > As for execution speed, it should be identical to GOTO as it does the > same sort of processing. And it avoids the potential problem of jumping > to arbitrary code location that is NOT the end of a loop. Also with GOTO > one must seek its target when looking through the code. It could be > earlier or later than the loop we are in. > > I wouldn't want to introduce a syntax for this concept yet but I'm sure > the example below is self-explanitory... > > Scans:for i = 1 to length(s) do > c = getc(h) > while find(c, charlist) do > if c = AbortCode then > exit (ScanS) > end if > RoutineA(c) > end while > RoutineB() > end Scans > I liked your suggestion but this way we'll create a label (or some kind of). Don't you agree that *interpreter* knows loop's boundaries? What I mean by exit(N) is *execute next line after the Nth. loop. Today we use flags to control deep nested loops exiting. Don't you think we could have *automatic inner flags* to do the same. Ok, I'm lazy, but I wouldn't have to set a flag and test it at each loop end just to see if is farewell time. > (I'd also like to get rid of this silly 'end for', 'end while', 'end > procedure', 'end function' stuff. Just a maintenance headache and serves > no useful purpose, but that's another issue ) > Agreed, let's talk about later though I think it makes sense. > ----- > cheers, > Derek. > Cheers, -- Euler
4. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by kbochert at ix.netcom.com Feb 17, 2002
- 474 views
-------Phoenix-Boundary-07081998- Hi Derek Parnell, you wrote on 2/17/02 12:30:56 PM: >Goto is more semanticly meaningful, more >versatile, runs faster and its target is more >easily found. > >This is where we part company. If we use "semanticly" to mean that it >conveys meaning, then GOTO is in fact less semantically meaningful than >EXIT. My reasoning is that GOTO means that the logic flow jumps somewhere >into the code. 'goto error' seems fairly meaningful, especially as compared to 'exit(3)'. > We don't know where (in a logical sense) until we read and >possible examine the program. Where as EXIT also means that the logic flow >jumps, but we know exactly where - the next statement after the looping >logic we are in. We don't have to examine the code. We already know which >lines it jumps over. Granted, in a physical sense, we still have to use our >eyes to find that 'next statement', but in a logic sense, it is total >clear. > >The problems with EXIT(N) are as you have said earlier. The issue is with >the (N) part. But if we go back to what EXIT means, 'leaves the loop', then >to extend this into a facility to leave a nested loop, it might be better >to >identify which loop you are trying to leave. With the(N) method there are >problems, the chief being that when you (or others) modify the code, they >must always recheck that the (N) still refers to the correct nesting depth. > >Another method of identify the loop is to give it a name, which of course >doesn't change as you modify the code in future. Then the EXIT statement >nominates the name of the loop it wants to exit. In this way we get the >semantic benefit (EXIT means leave a loop), and maintenance benefit (the >loop's name doesn't change unless we specifically change it). > Much better. I am not opposed to 'exit' or 'exit (srch_loop)'. (But 'exit (srch_loop)' seems pretty equivalent to 'goto end_srch_loop'). >As for execution speed, it should be identical to GOTO as it does the same >sort of processing. I think you're right. > And it avoids the potential problem of jumping to >arbitrary code location that is NOT the end of a loop. One programmer's potential problem is another's tool. > Also with GOTO one >must seek its target when looking through the code. It could be earlier or >later than the loop we are in. > I would rather search for the label than take the risk of miscounting 'end while/for' as I scan through multiple pages. In practice, the name of the lable usually indicates its direction, and an editor's search capability make this easy. >I wouldn't want to introduce a syntax for this concept yet but I'm sure the >example below is self-explanitory... > > Scans:for i = 1 to length(s) do > c = getc(h) > while find(c, charlist) do > if c = AbortCode then > exit (ScanS) > end if > RoutineA(c) > end while > RoutineB() > end Scans > Not bad. Use of 'end Scans' instead of 'end for' greatly simplifies finding the target of exit, and should also improve the readability. Shouldn't you also have a 'continue (Scans)' statement? Given that this exercise is to simplify nested loops, it would be a shame to add an enclosing while loop just to be able to restart a loop. I prefer the goto -- a little more versatile, a little more subject to abuse -- because it calls attention to itself a little more, but this scheme is a very close second. (perhaps the biggest thing that goto has going for it is that I've already implemented it!) Karl -------Phoenix-Boundary-07081998---
5. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by mistertrik at hotmail.com Feb 17, 2002
- 483 views
>(I'd also like to get rid of this silly 'end for', 'end >while', 'end >procedure', 'end function' stuff. Just a maintenance >headache and serves >no >useful purpose, but that's another issue ) Have you done C programming? Do you know how ANNOYING trying to chase down { and } characters are in a deeply nested for & if loop? Just for the record, I have no problems with constructing for and if loops 3-4 levels deep, because as long as it is indented properly, it is very easy to understand. ===================================================== .______<-------------------\__ / _____<--------------------__|=== ||_ <-------------------/ \__| Mr Trick
6. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by Derek Parnell <ddparnell at bigpond.com> Feb 17, 2002
- 472 views
18/02/2002 9:17:52 AM, kbochert at ix.netcom.com wrote: > >Hi Derek Parnell, you wrote on 2/17/02 12:30:56 PM: > Firstly, I'm not arguing for or against the GOTO per se in this particular discussion. I could! But I'm not. I'm specifically examining the use of GOTO as a method of exiting loops. >>Goto is more semanticly meaningful, more >>versatile, runs faster and its target is more >>easily found. > > >>This is where we part company. If we use "semanticly" to mean that it >>conveys meaning, then GOTO is in fact less semantically meaningful than >>EXIT. My reasoning is that GOTO means that the logic flow jumps somewhere >>into the code. > >'goto error' seems fairly meaningful, especially as compared >to 'exit(3)'. > Maybe? I'm not sure. To me, GOTO means "jump somewhere", and EXIT means "I want to leave a loop". The difference is that a GOTO does not convey the coder's intention where as EXIT has a better chance of doing that. Even with disciplined naming conventions, a GOTO can still mislead a person reading the code. With a GOTO, it is never clear from the statement itself, if the coder is trying to leave a loop or not. One can only know if you find the target of the GOTO and see if it is outside the loop or not. Even if the coder writes "GOTO exit_srchloop" we cannot be sure if the label exit_srchloop is actually outside the loop or not until we locate it when reading the code. There is always a danger in trying to convey meaning in an identifier's name. Of course we all try do that, but often it is hard. I'm reminded of a (stupid?) junior programmer that thought he has having a joke and coded something like this... constant HUNDRED = 100, THOUSAND = 10 * HUNDRED - 1, MILLION = 10 * THOUSAND and thus when the constants were used in code, other people would have a terrible time trying to debug the code when reading it. Or a Forth programmer doing this : + - ; (redefining the plus sign to mean minus!). >>Another method of identify the loop is to give it a name, which of course >>doesn't change as you modify the code in future. Then the EXIT statement >>nominates the name of the loop it wants to exit. In this way we get the >>semantic benefit (EXIT means leave a loop), and maintenance benefit (the >>loop's name doesn't change unless we specifically change it). >> > >Much better. I am not opposed to 'exit' or 'exit (srch_loop)'. (But >'exit (srch_loop)' seems pretty equivalent to 'goto end_srch_loop'). > It is except that EXIT tells you that the coder wants to leave a loop, but GOTO only tells you that the coder wants to go somewhere else. >> And it avoids the potential problem of jumping to >>arbitrary code location that is NOT the end of a loop. > >One programmer's potential problem is another's tool. > Again, I'm not talking about GOTO per se, just leaving a loop. Consider... for i = 1 to 100 do . . . if x then goto exit_scan end if . . . end for cnt += 1 :exit_scan: In this case, not only does the code leave the loop, it also ignores the code immediately following the loop, thus possibly introducing a bug and misleading a person reading the loop code. It is made even more misleading because it allows for this too: if y then goto exit_scan end if for i = 1 to 100 do . . . if x then goto exit_scan end if . . . end for cnt += 1 :exit_scan: Now, the label 'exit_scan' has really lost its meaning. This does not help people reading your code. >> Also with GOTO one >>must seek its target when looking through the code. It could be earlier or >>later than the loop we are in. >> > >I would rather search for the label than take the risk of miscounting >'end while/for' as I scan through multiple pages. In practice, >the name of the lable usually indicates its direction, and an editor's >search capability make this easy. > Me too. That's one of the reasons I don't like exit(n) syntax. >>I wouldn't want to introduce a syntax for this concept yet but I'm sure the >>example below is self-explanitory... >> >> Scans:for i = 1 to length(s) do >> c = getc(h) >> while find(c, charlist) do >> if c = AbortCode then >> exit (ScanS) >> end if >> RoutineA(c) >> end while >> RoutineB() >> end Scans >> >Not bad. Use of 'end Scans' instead of 'end for' greatly >simplifies finding the target of exit, and should also >improve the readability. Thank you. >Shouldn't you also have a 'continue (Scans)' statement? >Given that this exercise is to simplify nested loops, it would >be a shame to add an enclosing while loop just to be able to >restart a loop. Yes, I think this idea is also a good one, and I've discussed this with RDS before. Using named loops make the ideas of moving on to the next iteration and repeating the same iteration much easier on the eyes. for i = 1 to 100 do:ScanLoop . . . -- Do the next iteration if c then next Scanloop end if . . . -- Repeat the same iteration if d then repeat Scanloop end if . . . -- Leave the loop if e then exit ScanLoop end if . . . end ScanLoop --------- Cheers, Derek Parnell
7. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by Derek Parnell <ddparnell at bigpond.com> Feb 17, 2002
- 482 views
18/02/2002 11:23:30 AM, mistertrik at hotmail.com wrote: > >>(I'd also like to get rid of this silly 'end for', 'end >while', 'end >>procedure', 'end function' stuff. Just a maintenance >headache and serves >>no >>useful purpose, but that's another issue ) > >Have you done C programming? I've been programming in C since 1979. >Do you know how ANNOYING trying to chase down { >and } characters are in a deeply nested for & if loop? Too bloody right I do. Especially when they are optional! if (cond1) if (cond2) RtnA; else RtnB; RtnB gets executed when NOT cond1, and cond2 has nothing to do with it! Which is most confusing. >Just for the record, I have no problems with constructing for and if loops >3-4 levels deep, because as long as it is indented properly, it is very easy >to understand. I too learned the value of consistant indentation sytle with C. I also now always use braces with if/for/while statements. if (cond1) { if (cond2) { RtnA; }; } else { RtnB; } --------- Cheers, Derek Parnell
8. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by Derek Parnell <ddparnell at bigpond.com> Feb 17, 2002
- 485 views
Euler, I hope you don't mind me publishing your question in the Eu forum. 18/02/2002 2:15:28 PM, "Euler German" wrote: >would be possible to have as much identified loops as >we need? I mean, to handle situations when we could use a total, a mid >term and a simple (not identified) exit. Why not? I would not like to break any existing code so loop labels would have to be optional. Also, any loop could have a label. I suspect that the loop identifier should only be scoped to the containing routine (or file if its not in a routine). Though it might be argued that the scope should only be to the identifier loop and nested loops, similar to the automatic index variable in FOR loops. for i = 1 to width do:bAcross . . . for j = 1 to Height do:bDown . . . if a then exit bAcross end if . . . while c do:bAnalysis . . . if b then exit bDown end if if d then exit bAcross end if . . . end bAnalysis . . . end bDown . . . end bAcross -------- Derek
9. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by Graeme <graemeburke at hotmail.com> Feb 18, 2002
- 481 views
>18/02/2002 11:23:30 AM, mistertrik at hotmail.com wrote: > >> >>>(I'd also like to get rid of this silly 'end for', 'end >while', 'end >>>procedure', 'end function' stuff. Just a maintenance >headache and serves >>>no >>>useful purpose, but that's another issue ) >> >>Have you done C programming? > >I've been programming in C since 1979. > >>Do you know how ANNOYING trying to chase down { >>and } characters are in a deeply nested for & if loop? > I agree. I value READABLE CODE much more highly than conveniant code editing shortcuts. The syntax was designed that way to make readable, easy to de-bug code, and IMHO is entirely consistant with the style of launguage that rds created, as described in refman.doc im sure with your 20+ years looking at c code that these things seem redundant, but I think the one big lesson that can be learnt from the C-monster is the real world value of readable code. Graeme.
10. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by Derek Parnell <ddparnell at bigpond.com> Feb 18, 2002
- 466 views
----- Original Message ----- From: "Graeme" <graemeburke at hotmail.com> To: "EUforum" <EUforum at topica.com> Subject: Re: Exit(n) vs. goto > but I think the one big lesson that can be learnt > from the C-monster is the real world value of readable code. Reminds me of the saying "No one is completely useless, at the very least you can stand as a good example of what not to be."
11. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by Graeme <graemeburke at hotmail.com> Feb 18, 2002
- 473 views
>Reminds me of the saying "No one is completely useless, at the very least >you can stand as a good example of what not to be." > Waxing philosophical derek? perhaps you would be so kind as to provide us with the origon of the quote... Graeme,
12. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by Derek Parnell <ddparnell at bigpond.com> Feb 18, 2002
- 486 views
----- Original Message ----- From: "Graeme" <graemeburke at hotmail.com> To: "EUforum" <EUforum at topica.com> Subject: Re: Exit(n) vs. goto > > > >Reminds me of the saying "No one is completely useless, at the very least > >you can stand as a good example of what not to be." > > > > Waxing philosophical derek? perhaps you would be so kind as to > provide us with the origon of the quote... > That was from memory, so I looked it up. So to quote Dr. Simon Lipscomb-Allhouse, (Univ. Labs of Physiology, Oxford) who may in fact be quoting somebody else... "No-one is completely useless-They can always serve as a bad example."
13. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by kbochert at ix.netcom.com Feb 18, 2002
- 520 views
-------Phoenix-Boundary-07081998- Hi Derek Parnell, you wrote on 2/17/02 4:39:07 PM: >I too learned the value of consistant indentation sytle with C. I also now >always use braces >with >if/for/while statements. > > if (cond1) > { > if (cond2) > { > RtnA; > }; > } > else > { > RtnB; > } Just to be opinionated if (cond1) { if (cond2) { RtnA; } } else { RtnB; } Reasons: 1) Blank (or nearly blank) lines should be used as 'visual separators' to group related chunks of code. (Unless you are getting paid by the line, of course). One rarely wants to interrupt the reader just after an if clause starts. 2) To my view, the '{}' after if are part of the contents of the if clause, and deserve to be indented just like the other contents. 3) Nobody else does it this way (It must be better). Karl -------Phoenix-Boundary-07081998---
14. Re: Exit(n) vs. goto
- Posted by Euler German <efgerman at myrealbox.com> Feb 18, 2002
- 483 views
Of course not! As a matter of fact, only now I realize that you answered me personally. Be my guest, Derek. Cheers, -- Euler On 18 Feb 2002, at 15:21, Derek Parnell wrote: > Euler, > I hope you don't mind me publishing your question in the Eu forum. > > 18/02/2002 2:15:28 PM, "Euler German" wrote: > > >would be possible to have as much identified loops as > >we need? I mean, to handle situations when we could use a total, a mid > >term and a simple (not identified) exit. > > Why not? I would not like to break any existing code so loop labels > would have to be optional. Also, any loop could have a label. I suspect > that the loop identifier should only be scoped to the containing routine > (or file if its not in a routine). Though it might be argued that the > scope should only be to the identifier loop and nested loops, similar to > the automatic index variable in FOR loops. > > for i = 1 to width do:bAcross > . . . > for j = 1 to Height do:bDown > . . . > if a then exit bAcross end if > . . . > while c do:bAnalysis > . . . > if b then exit bDown end if > if d then exit bAcross end if > . . . > end bAnalysis > . . . > end bDown > . . . > end bAcross > > -------- > Derek > >