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    • Literal

    Literal-case

    Case macro for the different kinds of literal structures.

    This is an ACL2::fty sum-type case macro, typically introduced by fty::defflexsum or fty::deftagsum. It allows you to safely check the type of a literal structure, or to split into cases based on its type.

    Short Form

    In its short form, literal-case allows you to safely check the type of a literal structure. For example:

    (literal-case x :bool)

    is essentially just a safer alternative to writing:

    (equal (literal-kind x) :bool)

    Why is using literal-case safer? When we directly inspect the kind with equal, there is no static checking being done to ensure that, e.g., :bool is a valid kind of literal structure. That means there is nothing to save you if, later, you change the kind keyword for this type from :bool to something else. It also means you get no help if you just make a typo when writing the :bool symbol. Over the course of developing VL, we found that such issues were very frequent sources of errors!

    Long Form

    In its longer form, literal-case allows you to split into cases based on the kind of structure you are looking at. A typical example would be:

    (literal-case x
      :bool ...
      :unsigned ...
      :signed ...
      :string ...
      :address ...
      :field ...
      :group ...
      :scalar ...)

    It is also possible to consolidate ``uninteresting'' cases using :otherwise.

    For convenience, the case macro automatically binds the fields of x for you, as appropriate for each case. That is, in the :bool case, you can use fty::defprod-style foo.bar style accessors for x without having to explicitly add a bool b* binder.