3

I'm reading about lazy evaluation and having trouble understanding a basic example they gave.

#lang racket
(define (bad-if x y z)
  (if x y z))
(define (factorial-wrong x)
  (bad-if (= x 0)
          1
          (* x (factorial-wrong (- x 1)))))

(factorial-wrong 4)

I'm a little confused as to why this program never terminates. I know the following code works just fine:

(define (factorial x)
  (if (= x 0)
      1
      (* x (factorial (- x 1)))))

(factorial 4)

So I'm assuming it has something to do with scope. I tried step by step debugging and factorial-wrong executes the recursion function even when x is mapped to 0.

2 Answers 2

5

The standard if

(if test-expr then-expr else-expr)

will only evaluate either then-expr or else-expr, depending on test-expr, because this if is either a special form or a syntactic extension based on a special form, which means it doesn't follow the normal evaluation rules.

bad-if, on the other hand, is a standard procedure. In that case, Scheme first evaluates both expressions since they are parameters to the procedure bad-if before actually executing bad-if. So, even for x = 0, (* x (factorial -1)) will be evaluated, which will in turn evaluate (* x (factorial -2)) and so on, in an endless loop.

3
  • so the if statements are behaving differently in the two examples? any idea why that is so?
    – jeebface
    Oct 21, 2014 at 21:46
  • 3
    No the if statements behave exactly in the same way. The difference comes from the fact that you call bad-if which is a procedure. It's the procedure calling mechanism which forces the additional evaluation.
    – uselpa
    Oct 21, 2014 at 21:54
  • 1
    To further note the fact that if is not a procedure, if you enter in bad-if at the REPL, you should see something like #<procedure:bad-if>, whereas if you enter if, you should get a bad-syntax error. The same holds true for or and and, since those two forms have special rules for when to evaluate their arguments as well.
    – Jack
    Oct 21, 2014 at 22:20
4

Use the stepper!

To be more specific:

  • Snip the #lang racket off the top of your program
  • Change the language level to "Intermediate Student"
  • Click on the Step button. Watch carefully to see where things go off the rails.
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