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Is it legal to call a C compiler written in C or a PHP interpreter written in PHP metacircular? Is this definition valid only for languages of a specific type, like Lisp? In short, what are the conditions that an interpreter should satisfy for being called Metacircular?

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    JFYI, this is one of the issues that are discussed in the PLAI textbook (see www.plai.org). Reading that will probably work out better than reading wikipedia. Sep 26, 2009 at 15:06

4 Answers 4

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A metacircular interpreter is an interpreter written in a (possibly more basic) implementation of the same language. This is usually done to experiment with adding new features to a language, or creating a different dialect.

The reason this process is associated with Lisp is because of the highly lucid paper "The Art of the Interpreter", which shows several metacircular interpreters based on Scheme. (The paper is the kernel for the book SICP, and its fourth chapter works through others that create e.g. a lazily-evaluated Scheme.)

This is also vastly easier to do in a "homoiconic" language (a language whose code can be manipulated as data at runtime), such as Lisp, Prolog, and Forth.

As to your direct question - the C compiler wouldn't be an interpreter at all. A compiler written in its own language is 'self-hosting', which is a similar property, but more related to bootstrapping. A PHP interpreter in PHP probably wouldn't count, since you would likely be re-implementing a nontrivial amount of the language in the process. The major benefit of a conventional metacircular interpreter is that doing so isn't necessary - you can plug in the existing parser, garbage collection (if any), etc., and just write a top-level evaluator with different semantics. In Scheme or Prolog, it's often less than a page of code.

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    the reason this is associated with Lisp is that McCarthy (you may have heard of him) gave a description of Lisp evaluation in Lisp. Sep 26, 2009 at 16:17
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    While the original Lisp was defined in terms of itself on paper (before it was ever implemented, which is an interesting story in its own right), AotI / SICP have probably done more to directly popularize the idea and (in particular) the term, which is what the question is about. Also, I have in fact heard of him. Was that really necessary? Sep 26, 2009 at 17:11
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    say what you want, the term is associated with Lisp via McCarthy's famous paper. Nice that a Scheme paper and some books pick up the idea 17 years later. Sep 26, 2009 at 18:14
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    Alan Kay says: '... that was the big revelation to me when I was in graduate school - when I finally understood that the half page of code on the bottom of page 13 of the Lisp 1.5 manual was Lisp in itself. These were "Maxwell's Equations of Software!" This is the whole world of programming in a few lines that I can put my hand over.' Sep 26, 2009 at 18:38
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Here is a definition from the wikipedia page for metacircular:

A meta-circular evaluator is a special case of a self-interpreter in which the existing facilities of the parent interpreter are directly applied to the source code being interpreted, without any need for additional implementation.

So the answer is no in both cases:

  • A C compiler is not an interpreter (evaluator). It translates a program from one form to another without executing it.
  • A (hypothetical) PHP interpreter written in PHP would be a self interpreter, but not necessarily metacircular.
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To complement the above answers: http://www.c2.com/cgi/wiki?MetaCircularEvaluator

Lisp written in Lisp implements "eval" by calling "eval". But there is no "eval" in many other languages (and if there is, it has different semantics), so instead a completely new language system would have to be written, one which gives a detailed algorithm for "eval" -- which was not necessary in the metacircular case. And that is the magic of MetaCircularEvaluators: they reflect an underlying magic of the languages in which they are possible.

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As i understand it, a metacircular interpreter is an interpreter that can interpret itself.

A compiler only translates code, and doesn't execute it.

Any Turing-complete language is mathematically able to emulate any logical computation, so here's an example using Python. Instead of using CPython to translate this code to CPU instructions and execute it, you could also use PyPy. The latter is bootstrapped, so fulfills some arbitrary criterion that some people use to define a metacircular interpreter.

"""
Metacircular Python interpreter with macro feature.
By Cees Timmerman, 14aug13.
"""

import re

def meta_python_exec(code):
    # Optional meta feature.
    re_macros = re.compile("^#define (\S+) ([^\r\n]+)", re.MULTILINE)
    macros = re_macros.findall(code)
    code = re_macros.sub("", code)
    for m in macros:
        code = code.replace(m[0], m[1])

    # Run the code.
    exec(code)

if __name__ == "__main__":
    #code = open("metacircular_overflow.py", "r").read()  # Causes a stack overflow in Python 3.2.3, but simply raises "RuntimeError: maximum recursion depth exceeded while calling a Python object" in Python 2.7.3.
    code = "#define 1 2\r\nprint(1 + 1)"
    meta_python_exec(code)

A C compiler written in C is not a MetaCircularEvaluator, because the compiler must specify extremely detailed and precise semantics for each and every construct. The fact that the compiler is written in the target language does not help at all; the same algorithms could be translated into Pascal or Java or Ada or Cobol, and it would still be a perfectly good C compiler.

By contrast, a MetaCircularInterpreter for Lisp can't be translated into a non-Lisp language. That's right, cannot be -- at least, not in any simple one-to one fashion. Lisp written in Lisp implements "eval" by calling "eval". But there is no "eval" in many other languages (and if there is, it has different semantics), so instead a completely new language system would have to be written, one which gives a detailed algorithm for "eval" -- which was not necessary in the metacircular case.

And that is the magic of MetaCircularEvaluators: they reflect an underlying magic of the languages in which they are possible.

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    This is no Meta-circular interpreter. It isn't even an interpreter, it is a prerprocessor. :)
    – Tobias
    Aug 29, 2014 at 11:10
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    exec and friends, while being meta-level behavior, do no make a meta-circular interpreter. You can make meta-circular interpreters in languages with no meta-level facilities whatsoever. The thing about meta-circularity is: an interpreter for Language A written in Lanugage A. Eg, Pascal in Pascal, or Basic in Basic, or Smalltalk in Smalltalk. Using exec just passes on to the host Python and does not pose a new implementation of Python. pypy is a meta-circular Python, you should look at it!
    – Tobias
    Aug 30, 2014 at 15:36
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    meta-circularity is about interpreters (or compilers). Your code is neither, hence not meta-circular. However, it is using meta-programming
    – Tobias
    Sep 4, 2014 at 9:24
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    In Lisp/Scheme it is not Lisp written in Lisp implementing "eval" by calling "eval", when the first eval is not the same as the second eval. The called eval is not to be confused with Python's exec; the eval is implemented by the meta-circular interpreter and not the one of the host language.
    – Tobias
    Sep 4, 2014 at 13:49
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    @Tobias "Using exec just passes on to the host Python and does not pose a new implementation of Python". Neither does Lisp's metacircular evaluator (as described by McCarthy and others). It punts many tasks including parsing, environment capture and garbage collection to the host Lisp implementation.
    – J D
    Mar 22, 2017 at 0:40

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