| Allegro CL version 8.2 Significantly revised from 8.1. 8.1 version | ||||||||||
As with all compiler switch variables, the value of this variable
can be t, nil, or a
function object that accepts five arguments and returns t or nil. The arguments
passed to the function will be the values of the safety, space, speed,
debug, and compilation-speed optimization qualities, in that order. nil is equivalent to a function that always returns
nil and t to a
function that always returns t. When the
value is a function and we say t (or true) or
nil (or false) in the text below, we mean
that the function returns, respectively, t or
nil.
If true, and if the compiler trusts declarations (that is
trust-declarations-switch is true), the
compiler will trust dynamic-extent declarations in code and produce
code (when it can) that is optimized given the declarations. Having a
switch which controls dynamic-extent declarations when declarations
are trusted (via the general trust-declarations-switch) allows
dynamic-extent declarations to be ignored while other declarations are
trusted. When using multiprocessing, trusting
dynamic-extent declarations may be unsafe when
trusting other declarations is
safe. See Stack
consing, avoiding consing using apply, and stack allocation
in compiling.htm for a discussion of the issues
surrounding multiprocessing and dynamic extent.
If trust-declarations-switch
is nil, this switch is ignored.
Initially true when speed is greater than or equal to safety, which
means that this switch will be true in the default when
the trust-declarations-switch is true in the
default (which is when speed is greater than safety). If there is an
issue with multiprocessing, you should bind or set this switch
to nil, or design your own
function.
See compiling.htm for information on the compiler.
Copyright (c) 1998-2016, Franz Inc. Oakland, CA., USA. All rights reserved.
This page has had significant revisions compared to the 8.1 page.
Created 2016.6.21.
| Allegro CL version 8.2 Significantly revised from 8.1. 8.1 version | ||||||||||