5.7 Object and Class Contracts
(class/c member-spec ...) |
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member-spec | | = | | method-spec | | | | | | (field field-spec ...) | | | | | | (init field-spec ...) | | | | | | (init-field field-spec ...) | | | | | | (inherit method-spec ...) | | | | | | (inherit-field field-spec ...) | | | | | | (super method-spec ...) | | | | | | (inner method-spec ...) | | | | | | (override method-spec ...) | | | | | | (augment method-spec ...) | | | | | | (augride method-spec ...) | | | | | | method-spec | | = | | method-id | | | | | | (method-id method-contract) | | | | | | field-spec | | = | | field-id | | | | | | (field-id contract-expr) |
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Produces a contract for a class.
There are two major categories of contracts listed in a class/c
form: external and internal contracts. External contracts govern behavior
when an object is instantiated from a class or when methods or fields are
accessed via an object of that class. Internal contracts govern behavior
when method or fields are accessed within the class hierarchy. This
separation allows for stronger contracts for class clients and weaker
contracts for subclasses.
Method contracts must contain an additional initial argument which corresponds
to the implicit this parameter of the method. This allows for
contracts which discuss the state of the object when the method is called
(or, for dependent contracts, in other parts of the contract). Alternative
contract forms, such as ->m, are provided as a shorthand
for writing method contracts.
The external contracts are as follows:
A method contract without a tag describes the behavior
of the implementation of method-id on method sends to an object of the
contracted class. This contract will continue to be checked in subclasses until
the contracted class’s implementation is no longer the entry point for dynamic
dispatch.
A field contract, tagged with field, describes the behavior of the
value contained in that field when accessed via an object of that class. Since
fields may be mutated, these contracts are checked on any external access and/or
mutation of the field.
An initialization argument contract, tagged with init, describes the
expected behavior of the value paired with that name during class instantiation.
The same name can be provided more than once, in which case the first such contract
in the class/c form is applied to the first value tagged with that name in
the list of initialization arguments, and so on.
The contracts listed in an init-field section are treated as if each
contract appeared in an init section and a field section.
The internal contracts are as follows:
A method contract, tagged with inherit, describes the behavior of the
method when invoked directly (i.e., via inherit) in any subclass of the
contracted class. This contract, like external method contracts, applies until
the contracted class’s method implementation is no longer the entry point for dynamic
dispatch.
A field contract, tagged with inherit-field, describes the behavior of the
value contained in that field when accessed directly (i.e., via inherit-field)
in any subclass of the contracted class. Since fields may be mutated, these contracts are
checked on any access and/or mutation of the field that occurs in such subclasses.
A method contract, tagged with super, describes the behavior of
method-id when called by the super form in a subclass. This contract
only affects super calls in subclasses which call the contract class’s
implementation of method-id.
A method contract, tagged with inner, describes the behavior the class
expects of an augmenting method in a subclass. This contract affects any implementations
of method-id in subclasses which can be called via inner from the
contracted class. This means a subclass which implements method-id via
augment or overment stop future subclasses from being affected by
the contract, since further extension cannot be reached via the contracted class.
A method contract, tagged with override, describes the behavior expected by
the contracted class for method-id when called directly (i.e. by the application
(method-id ...)). This form can only be used if overriding the method in subclasses
will change the entry point to the dynamic dispatch chain (i.e., the method has never been
augmentable).
A method contract, tagged with either augment or augride, describes the
behavior provided by the contracted class for method-id when called directly from
subclasses. These forms can only be used if the method has previously been augmentable, which
means that no augmenting or overriding implementation will change the entry point to the
dynamic dispatch chain. augment is used when subclasses can augment the method, and
augride is used when subclasses can override the current augmentation.
Similar to
->, except that the domain of the resulting contract contains one more element
than the stated domain, where the first (implicit) argument is contracted with
any/c.
This contract is useful for writing simpler method contracts when no properties of
this
need to be checked.
(->*m (mandatory-dom ...) (optional-dom ...) rest range) |
Similar to
->*, except that the mandatory domain of the resulting contract contains one
more element than the stated domain, where the first (implicit) argument is contracted with
any/c. This contract is useful for writing simpler method contracts when no properties
of
this need to be checked.
(case->m (-> dom ... rest range) ...) |
Similar to
case->, except that the mandatory domain of each case of the resulting contract
contains one more element than the stated domain, where the first (implicit) argument is contracted
with
any/c. This contract is useful for writing simpler method contracts when no properties
of
this need to be checked.
(->dm (mandatory-dependent-dom ...) | (optional-dependent-dom ...) | dependent-rest | pre-cond | dep-range) |
|
Similar to
->d, except that the mandatory domain of the resulting contract
contains one more element than the stated domain, where the first (implicit) argument is contracted
with
any/c. In addition,
this is appropriately bound in the body of the contract.
This contract is useful for writing simpler method contracts when no properties
of
this need to be checked.
(object/c member-spec ...) |
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member-spec | | = | | method-spec | | | | | | (field field-spec ...) | | | | | | method-spec | | = | | method-id | | | | | | (method-id method-contract) | | | | | | field-spec | | = | | field-id | | | | | | (field-id contract-expr) |
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Produces a contract for an object.
Unlike the older form object-contract, but like
class/c, arbitrary contract expressions are allowed.
Also, method contracts for object/c follow those for
class/c. An object wrapped with object/c
behaves as if its class had been wrapped with the equivalent
class/c contract.
Produces a contract for an object, where the object is an
instance of a class that conforms to class-contract.
(object-contract member-spec ...) |
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member-spec | | = | | (method-id method-contract) | | | | | | (field field-id contract-expr) | | | | | | method-contract | | = | | (-> dom ... range) | | | | | | (->* (mandatory-dom ...) | (optional-dom ...) | rest | range) |
| | | | | | (->d (mandatory-dependent-dom ...) | (optional-dependent-dom ...) | dependent-rest | pre-cond | dep-range) |
| | | | | | dom | | = | | dom-expr | | | | | | keyword dom-expr | | | | | | range | | = | | range-expr | | | | | | (values range-expr ...) | | | | | | any | | | | | | mandatory-dom | | = | | dom-expr | | | | | | keyword dom-expr | | | | | | optional-dom | | = | | dom-expr | | | | | | keyword dom-expr | | | | | | rest | | = | | | | | | | | #:rest rest-expr | | | | | | mandatory-dependent-dom | | = | | [id dom-expr] | | | | | | keyword [id dom-expr] | | | | | | optional-dependent-dom | | = | | [id dom-expr] | | | | | | keyword [id dom-expr] | | | | | | dependent-rest | | = | | | | | | | | #:rest id rest-expr | | | | | | pre-cond | | = | | | | | | | | #:pre-cond boolean-expr | | | | | | dep-range | | = | | any | | | | | | [id range-expr] post-cond | | | | | | (values [id range-expr] ...) post-cond | | | | | | post-cond | | = | | | | | | | | #:post-cond boolean-expr |
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Produces a contract for an object.
Each of the contracts for a method has the same semantics as
the corresponding function contract, but the syntax of the
method contract must be written directly in the body of the
object-contract—much like the way that methods in class
definitions use the same syntax as regular function
definitions, but cannot be arbitrary procedures. Unlike the
method contracts for class/c, the implicit this
argument is not part of the contract. To allow for the use of
this in dependent contracts, ->d contracts
implicitly bind this to the object itself.
A
function contract that recognizes mixins. It guarantees that
the input to the function is a class and the result of the function is
a subclass of the input.
Produces a
function contract that guarantees the input to the
function is a class that implements/subclasses each
type, and
that the result of the function is a subclass of the input.
Accepts a class or interface and returns a flat contract that
recognizes objects that instantiate the class/interface.
Returns a flat contract that recognizes classes that implement
interface.
Returns a flat contract that recognizes classes that
are subclasses of class.