# Best use of parenthesis Michael Ash USA mike@mikeash.com ## Judges' comments Having problems speaking code? Do you LISP? Parenthetically speaking, this entry takes advantage of C99 features, while speaking parenthetically. Best of all, it self-reproduces! John McCarthy might not of imagined it quite like this! :-) ### To build gcc --std=c99 -o mikeash mikeash.c ### To run mikeash < mikeash.c mikeash < mikeash.c | diff - mikeash.c ## Author's comments This program is a self-reproducing program, which is on the IOCCC's list of discouraged program types. Worse, it's a self-reproducing program written in Common Lisp. What's this doing as an entry to the IOCCC? Start over; this program, when compiled with a C99 compiler, is an interpreter for an extremely limited and highly broken subset of Common Lisp. It requires C99 because of C99's ability to declare variables in the initializer of a for loop. Unfortunately, C99 mode typically warns about implicitly declared functions, and preprocessor directives prevent the program from being valid Common Lisp. As a result, several warnings will be printed about implicit declarations of functions. There are also warnings about unknown escape sequences in the constant string, due to different string escape semantics in C and Lisp, and some implicit integer-to-pointer conversions due to the implicitly-declared functions. Try: echo '(format t "~s" (+ 2 2 ))' | ./lispob You should see '4"' echoed on your command prompt. The " after the 4 and the lack of a newline are due to the somewhat broken implementation of the format function. More sophisticated arithmetic expressions may be used: echo '(format t "~s" (* (+ 2 2 ) (- 5 (/ 9 3 ))))' | ./lispob This evaluates the expression (2+2) * (5 - 9/3) giving the correct result, 8. Note that due to the highly ad-hoc nature of the tokenizer, the spaces before the closing paretheses are mandatory. The program can also be run in an interactive mode, by simply executing ./lispob and then typing lisp expressions, but this is difficult due to the lack of proper editing facilities and the total lack of error recovery in the interpreter. Typos will most likely crash the program. Aside from being required to put spaces between tokens and closing parentheses, there are other limitations on the dialect of Common Lisp that this program understands: * The only built-in functions are defvar, format, substitute, char-upcase, +, -, *, and /. * Only one variable is available. This variable is called 'q', although any symbol name starting with the letter 'q' will be mapped to this variable. * Only the first letter of a function name is significant. For example, format, f, farm, and various other words starting with 'f' will all map to the format function. * The defvar function completely ignores its first parameter. It will always store the result of evaluating its second parameter in 'q'. Unlike in Common Lisp, multiple invocations of defvar on the same variable will overwrite old values. * Character constants are limited to #\Newline and single-character constants such as #\x. * The char-upcase function will give strange results if passed something other than a lowercase character. * The format function takes exactly three parameters. The first parameter is ignored; output always goes to stdout. The second parameter must have exactly one ~s format specifier in it, and no other format specifiers are permitted. * The arithmetic functions take exactly two parameters. * All tokens must be separated from a following ) by whitespace. * A lot of other things. Notably, the language which this program interprets is nowhere near Turing-complete. Basically, the lisp interpreter is good for some basic math operations, and for running itself. To do the latter, try this: ./lispob < lispob.c > lispob2.c diff lispob.c lispob2.c The program can also be run from an implementation of common lisp. To do this, run the common lisp compiler and then type the following command: (load "lispob.c") The source code of lispob.c will be printed. Lispob is obfuscated in several ways. First, it's actually two programs in one, which actually share a small amount of code. Running a C code beautifier will destroy the lisp program contained within. Second and more importantly, it is very badly written, which will presumably confuse people who are used to looking at well-implemented interpreters. The program comes in at just under 2k of significant characters. However, this size is exaggerated, because it contains a complete copy of itself for the self-reproducing lisp program, making it twice the size. This doubling effect made it something of a challenge to fit inside the IOCCC's size limit. This code should be highly portable. It was tested under Mac OS X and Linux on i386, but it should run elsewhere. It requires ASCII due to hardcoding various character constants. Other than this requirement, it should run anywhere there's a conforming C99 compiler and a standard C library.