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Diffstat (limited to 'tvix')
-rw-r--r-- | tvix/eval/docs/recursive-attrs.md | 60 |
1 files changed, 60 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/tvix/eval/docs/recursive-attrs.md b/tvix/eval/docs/recursive-attrs.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..7776ff82793f --- /dev/null +++ b/tvix/eval/docs/recursive-attrs.md @@ -0,0 +1,60 @@ +Recursive attribute sets +======================== + +The construction behaviour of recursive attribute sets is very +specific, and a bit peculiar. + +In essence, there are multiple "phases" of scoping that take place +during attribute set construction: + +1. Every inherited value without an explicit source is inherited only + from the **outer** scope in which the attribute set is enclosed. + +2. A new scope is opened in which all recursive keys are evaluated. + This only considers **statically known keys**, attributes can + **not** recurse into dynamic keys in `self`! + + For example, this code is invalid in C++ Nix: + + ``` + nix-repl> rec { ${"a"+""} = 2; b = a * 10; } + error: undefined variable 'a' at (string):1:26 + ``` + +3. Finally, a third scope is opened in which dynamic keys are + evaluated. + +This behaviour, while possibly a bit strange and unexpected, actually +simplifies the implementation of recursive attribute sets in Tvix as +well. + +Essentially, a recursive attribute set like this: + +```nix +rec { + inherit a; + b = a * 10; + ${"c" + ""} = b * 2; +} +``` + +Can be compiled like the following expression: + +```nix +let + inherit a; +in let + b = a * 10; + in { + inherit a b; + ${"c" + ""} = b * 2; + } +``` + +Completely deferring the resolution of recursive identifiers to the +existing handling of recursive scopes (i.e. deferred access) in let +bindings. + +In practice, we can further specialise this and compile each scope +directly into the form expected by `OpAttrs` (that is, leaving +attribute names on the stack) before each value's position. |