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2 points by rocketnia 4265 days ago | link | parent

I assume by "s-expressions" we mean nested lists whose first elements are often symbols which represent operators. Apparently, Ruby already has built-in support for that code representation: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6894763/extract-the-ast-f...


1 point by Pauan 4265 days ago | link

Well then, using that it'd be possible to make Ruby macros.

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2 points by rocketnia 4265 days ago | link

Hmm, even if the package for doing this comes with Ruby MRI, I'm not sure there's a corresponding out-of-the-box way to take these s-expressions and get running code. But here's a five-year-old article talking about Ruby2Ruby, a library that converts these s-expressions to strings: http://www.igvita.com/2008/12/11/ruby-ast-for-fun-and-profit...

I don't think a third-party tool should count as language support, unless (and inasmuch as) the people maintaining the language regularly go out of their way to avoid breaking that tool.[1][2] This is where I draw the line, because of how it affects backwards compatibility.

Everyday language users tend to think of language updates as backwards-compatible as long as their existing code has the same behavior. But tools like eval(), JavaScript minifiers, and Ruby2Ruby place the bar higher, since their input is arbitrary language code, and it might be written in a newer language version than the tool itself. Incidentally, even a program that calls these tools will continue to work after a language update, as long as the input of these calls is all generated programmatically, rather than directly taken from the program's input.

[1] Well, I guess the term "third-party" might not apply in that case!

[2] I have no idea how much I'm actually talking about Ruby2Ruby, and this Ruby s-expression format in general, when I make this comment.

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