C inliners for arithmetic operations assumed that there may be more than two
arguments and worked similar to reduce:
ARG_n+3 <- (inline-binop ARG_n+2 ARG_n+1) op ARG_n
that said ECL has compiler macros that simplify the arithmetic so there are
always at most two arguments, so it is enough to inline:
(inline-binop ARG1 ARG2)
As for the incorrect code -- when there were remaining arguments, the result of
the previous operation was saved with save-inline-loc, but(!) save-inline-loc
expected an inlined argument, while inline-binop calls produce-inline-loc that
returns a "normal" location - that's probably some change from the past, because
produce-inline-loc seems to clearly indicate that it should return inlined value
- and save-inline-loc would always error because of the argument type mismatch.
This commit removes the dead code and now unused save-inline-loc function.
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| contrib | ||
| examples | ||
| msvc | ||
| src | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .gitlab-ci.yml | ||
| appveyor.yml | ||
| CHANGELOG | ||
| configure | ||
| COPYING | ||
| INSTALL | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| Makefile.in | ||
| README.md | ||
ECL stands for Embeddable Common-Lisp. The ECL project aims to produce an implementation of the Common-Lisp language which complies to the ANSI X3J13 definition of the language.
The term embeddable refers to the fact that ECL includes a Lisp to C compiler, which produces libraries (static or dynamic) that can be called from C programs. Furthermore, ECL can produce standalone executables from Lisp code and can itself be linked to your programs as a shared library. It also features an interpreter for situations when a C compiler isn't available.
ECL supports the operating systems Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonFly BSD, OpenBSD, Solaris (at least v. 9), Microsoft Windows (MSVC, MinGW and Cygwin) and OSX, running on top of the Intel, Sparc, Alpha, ARM and PowerPC processors. Porting to other architectures should be rather easy.