rubyx/lib/virtual/frame.rb
2014-07-24 21:56:31 +03:00

24 lines
1.0 KiB
Ruby

module Virtual
# A Message and a Frame make up the two sides of message passing:
# A Message (see details there) is created by the sender and control is transferred
# A Frame is created by the receiver
# In static languages these two objects are one, because the method is known at compile time.
# In that case the whole frame is usually on the stack, for leaves even omitted and all data is held in registers
#
# In a dynamic language the method is dynamically resolved, and so the size of the frame is not know to the caller
# Also exceptions (with the possibility of retry) and the idea of being able to take and store bindings
# make it, to say the very least, unsensibly tricky to store them on the stack. So we don't.
# Also at runtime Messages and Frames remain completely "normal" objects. Ie have layouts and so on. Which resolves the
# dichotomy of objects on the stack or heap. Sama sama.
class Frame
def initialize locals , temps
@locals = locals
@tmps = tmps
end
attr_accessor :locals , :tmps
end
end