1.4 KiB
Modules inclusion
Module is, at the low level, a statement that modifies a given context by adding here local and exported symbols, performing some tasks and even returning some value we don't need for now.
The compiled module is therefore a statement. When we execute it on some context, it wills it with all it symbols, private too.
If we call it on another context, it will do it once more, no caching. This is unnecessary if not dangerous repetition.
What is inclusion?
The goal of the inclusion is to make exported symbols available in a given context,
without re-executing included module initialization code. So, when we hit the import foo
,
we should check that foo module was executed, execute it if not on special context we store in the library, then copy all public symbols from fooContext into current one.
Class pseudo-module
Mostly same we can do with a class
Module initialization
We can just put the code into the module code:
module lying.samples.module
// or package?
val startuptTime = Instant.now()
// private: not available from outside
private fun moduleInitialization() {
// long code
}
// this will be called only once
moduleInitialization()
class initialization
already done using ObjInstance
class and instance-bound context with local
context stored in ObjInstance and class constructor statement in ObjClass.