On Monday, 31 July 2023 at 18:15:25 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
On Monday, July 31, 2023 4:55:44 AM MDT Quirin Schroll via Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
Apparently, functions can be overloaded solely distinguished by
attributes:
```d
void f(ref int x) pure { x = 1; }
void f(ref int x)      { x = 2; static int s; ++s; }
```

I thought that, maybe, a `pure` context calls the `pure` function and an impure context calls the impure function, but no: Calling `f` leads to an ambiguity error in both contexts. Even if that worked, what about inferred contexts, i.e. templates? In simple cases, they could forward the contexts in which they are called, but you can instantiate a template without calling it.

What am I missing here?

As things stand, the context in which a function is called is irrelevant. All that matters is the arguments.

And actually, allowing it would complicate any functions that infer attributes, potentially in a way that wouldn't work. For instance, if you have a templated function that's trying to infer purity, which one should it call? If it calls the pure one, it could be pure, but if it doesn't, it can't be. Either way, because the context isn't yet pure or not, the context can't be used to determine which should be called. Potentially, the compiler could just choose the pure function in that case, but the problem gets worse as you add more attributes.

I reasoned like this up about this point.

For instance, what happens when you have a function that's pure but not @safe and one that's @safe but not pure?
```d
void f() pure {...}
void f() @safe {...}
```
Should the compiler favor calling the pure one or the @safe one? And what if you then add something to the function that isn't @safe? If it was calling the @safe version before, should it switch to the pure one? And if the functions were @safe pure and @system and not pure instead
```d
void f() @safe pure {...}
void f() @system {...}
```
then changing the @safety or purity of some of the other code in the templated function could result in the loss of both attributes. And the more attributes are involved, the more complex the situation gets.

I didn’t even consider multiple attributes “in competition”.
At this point, it’s obvious that this can’t work.

In effect, we'd be making the attribute inference process have to go in two directions instead of just going from the bottom up, with the added complication that it would potentially need to choose between sets of attributes when choosing which function overload to call.

I tried assigning the address to a function pointer to disambiguate which overload I want. Didn’t work.

It's not necessarily the case that we couldn't sort all of this out and come up with a clean set of rules that allowed functions that infer their attributes to call the correct function, but it does get pretty complicated, and it comes with the serious downside that there's no guarantee that the overloads even do something similar to one another.

Actually, I do think it’s impossible to do the right thing. The spec can only make guesses on what a programmer might want.

And when you consider that it's pretty easy for a change in one part of the code to change which attributes are inferred in another part of the code, you could easily end up having a change in one part of your program resulting in drastically different behavior in a seemingly unrelated part of your program. And even worse, that change could be because of a library update, making it that much less obvious which parts of your program could suddenly change behavior due to a change in attributes.

Before looking into this, I thought that maybe this was in fact intended.

And I'm probably forgetting other issues that this would add to the mix. So, while it may very well be possible to do something along the lines of what you're looking for, I strongly suspect that it's simply not worth it.

You might have gotten me wrong. I don’t want to do something with it, I wondered if overloading based on attributes is a thing one has to consider when writing templates or something like that. A simple test was: Can I define those? If so, what happens on a function call? The spec doesn’t say anything about it.

As you say, overloads should essentially do the same. Overloads differing in attributes would differ in implementation details such that one can make guarantees and the other might give you better performance or other guarantees. Maybe that’s enough such that, if both implementations have value, they should differ in name (or a kind of tag parameter for overload selection).

Filed as https://issues.dlang.org/show_bug.cgi?id=24063

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