Statements

Chapel is an imperative language with statements that may have side effects. Statements allow for the sequencing of program execution. Chapel provides the following statements:

statement:
  block-statement
  expression-statement
  assignment-statement
  swap-statement
  io-statement
  conditional-statement
  select-statement
  while-do-statement
  do-while-statement
  for-statement
  label-statement
  break-statement
  continue-statement
  param-for-statement
  use-statement
  defer-statement
  empty-statement
  return-statement
  yield-statement
  module-declaration-statement
  procedure-declaration-statement
  external-procedure-declaration-statement
  exported-procedure-declaration-statement
  iterator-declaration-statement
  method-declaration-statement
  type-declaration-statement
  variable-declaration-statement
  remote-variable-declaration-statement
  on-statement
  cobegin-statement
  coforall-statement
  begin-statement
  sync-statement
  serial-statement
  atomic-statement
  forall-statement
  delete-statement

Individual statements are defined in the remainder of this chapter and additionally as follows:

Blocks

A block is a statement or a possibly empty list of statements that form their own scope. A block is given by

block-statement:
  { statements[OPT] }

statements:
  statement
  statement statements

Variables defined within a block are local variables (Local Variables).

The statements within a block are executed serially unless the block is in a cobegin statement (The Cobegin Statement).

Expression Statements

The expression statement evaluates an expression solely for side effects. The syntax for an expression statement is given by

expression-statement:
  variable-expression ;
  member-access-expression ;
  call-expression ;
  new-expression ;
  let-expression ;

Assignment Statements

An assignment statement assigns the value of an expression to another expression, for example, a variable. Assignment statements are given by

assignment-statement:
  lvalue-expression assignment-operator expression

assignment-operator: one of
   = += -= *= /= %= **= &= |= ^= &&= ||= <<= >>=

The assignment operators that contain a binary operator symbol as a prefix are compound assignment operators. The remaining assignment operator = is called simple assignment.

The expression on the left-hand side of the assignment operator must be a valid lvalue (LValue Expressions). It is evaluated before the expression on the right-hand side of the assignment operator, which can be any expression.

When the left-hand side is of a numerical type, there is an implicit conversion (Implicit Conversions) of the right-hand side expression to the type of the left-hand side expression. Additionally, for simple assignment, if the left-hand side is of Boolean type, the right-hand side is implicitly converted to the type of the left-hand side (i.e. a bool(?w) with the same width w).

For simple assignment, the validity and semantics of assigning between classes (Class Assignment), records (Record Assignment), unions (Union Assignment), tuples (Tuple Assignment), ranges (Range Assignment), domains (Domain Assignment), and arrays (Array Assignment) are discussed in these later sections.

A compound assignment is shorthand for applying the binary operator to the left- and right-hand side expressions and then assigning the result to the left-hand side expression. For numerical types, the left-hand side expression is evaluated only once, and there is an implicit conversion of the result of the binary operator to the type of the left-hand side expression. Thus, for example, x += y is equivalent to x = x + y where the expression x is evaluated once.

For all other compound assignments, Chapel provides a completely generic catch-all implementation defined in the obvious way. For example:

inline proc +=(ref lhs, rhs) {
  lhs = lhs + rhs;
}

Thus, compound assignment can be used with operands of arbitrary types, provided that the following provisions are met: If the type of the left-hand argument of a compound assignment operator op= is \(L\) and that of the right-hand argument is \(R\), then a definition for the corresponding binary operator op exists, such that \(L\) is coercible to the type of its left-hand formal and \(R\) is coercible to the type of its right-hand formal. Further, the result of op must be coercible to \(L\), and there must exist a definition for simple assignment between objects of type \(L\).

Both simple and compound assignment operators can be overloaded for different types using operator overloading (Function and Operator Overloading). In such an overload, the left-hand side expression should have ref intent and be modified within the body of the function. The return type of the function should be void.

The Swap Statement

The swap statement indicates to swap the values in the expressions on either side of the swap operator. Since both expressions are assigned to, each must be a valid lvalue expression (LValue Expressions).

The swap operator can be overloaded for different types using operator overloading (Function and Operator Overloading).

swap-statement:
  lvalue-expression swap-operator lvalue-expression

swap-operator:
  <=>

To implement the swap operation, the compiler uses temporary variables as necessary.

Example.

When resolved to the default swap operator, the following swap statement

var a, b: real;

a <=> b;

is semantically equivalent to:

const t = b;
b = a;
a = t;

The I/O Statement

The I/O operator indicates writing to the left-hand-side the value in the right-hand-side; or reading from the left-hand-side and storing the result in the variable on the right-hand-side. This operator can be chained with other I/O operator calls.

The I/O operator can be overloaded for different types using operator overloading (Function and Operator Overloading).

io-statement:
  io-expression io-operator expression

io-expression:
  expression
  io-expression io-operator expression

io-operator:
  <~>

See the module documentation on I/O for details on how to use the I/O statement.

Example.

In the example below,

var w = opentmp().writer(); // a channel
var a: real;
var b: int;

w <~> a <~> b;

the I/O operator is left-associative and indicates writing a and then b to w in this case.

The Conditional Statement

The conditional statement allows execution to choose between two statements based on the evaluation of an expression of bool type. The syntax for a conditional statement is given by

conditional-statement:
  'if' expression 'then' statement else-part[OPT]
  'if' expression block-statement else-part[OPT]

else-part:
  'else' statement

A conditional statement evaluates an expression of bool type. If the expression evaluates to true, the first statement in the conditional statement is executed. If the expression evaluates to false and the optional else-clause exists, the statement following the else keyword is executed.

If the expression is a parameter, the conditional statement is folded by the compiler. If the expression evaluates to true, the first statement replaces the conditional statement. If the expression evaluates to false, the second statement, if it exists, replaces the conditional statement; if the second statement does not exist, the conditional statement is removed.

Each statement embedded in the conditional-statement has its own scope whether or not an explicit block surrounds it.

If the statement that immediately follows the optional then keyword is a conditional statement and it is not in a block, the else-clause is bound to the nearest preceding conditional statement without an else-clause. The statement in the else-clause can be a conditional statement, too.

Example (conditionals.chpl).

The following function prints two when x is 2 and B,four when x is 4.

proc condtest(x:int) {
  if x > 3 then
    if x > 5 then
      write("A,");
    else
      write("B,");

  if x == 2 then
    writeln("two");
  else if x == 4 then
    writeln("four");
  else
    writeln("other");
}

The Select Statement

The select statement is a multi-way variant of the conditional statement. The syntax is given by:

select-statement:
  'select' expression { when-statements }

when-statements:
  when-statement
  when-statement when-statements

when-statement:
  'when' expression-list 'do' statement
  'when' expression-list block-statement
  'otherwise' statement
  'otherwise' 'do' statement

expression-list:
  expression
  expression , expression-list

The expression that follows the keyword select, the select expression, is evaluated once and its value is then compared with the list of case expressions following each when keyword. These values are compared using the equality operator ==. If the expressions cannot be compared with the equality operator, a compile-time error is generated. The first case expression that contains an expression where that comparison is true will be selected and control transferred to the associated statement. If the comparison is always false, the statement associated with the keyword otherwise, if it exists, will be selected and control transferred to it. There may be at most one otherwise statement and its location within the select statement does not matter.

Each statement embedded in the when-statement or the otherwise-statement has its own scope whether or not an explicit block surrounds it.

The While Do and Do While Loops

There are two variants of the while loop in Chapel. The syntax of the while-do loop is given by:

while-do-statement:
  'while' expression 'do' statement
  'while' expression block-statement

The syntax of the do-while loop is given by:

do-while-statement:
  'do' statement 'while' expression ;

In both variants, the expression evaluates to a value of type bool which determines when the loop terminates and control continues with the statement following the loop.

The while-do loop is executed as follows:

  1. The expression is evaluated.
  2. If the expression evaluates to false, the statement is not executed and control continues to the statement following the loop.
  3. If the expression evaluates to true, the statement is executed and control continues to step 1, evaluating the expression again.

The do-while loop is executed as follows:

  1. The statement is executed.
  2. The expression is evaluated.
  3. If the expression evaluates to false, control continues to the statement following the loop.
  4. If the expression evaluates to true, control continues to step 1 and the the statement is executed again.

In this second form of the loop, note that the statement is executed unconditionally the first time.

Example (while.chpl).

The following example illustrates the difference between the do-while-statement and the while-do-statement. The body of the do-while loop is always executed at least once, even if the loop conditional is already false when it is entered. The code

var t = 11;

writeln("Scope of do while loop:");
do {
  t += 1;
  writeln(t);
} while (t <= 10);

t = 11;
writeln("Scope of while loop:");
while (t <= 10) {
  t += 1;
  writeln(t);
}

produces the output

Scope of do while loop:
12
Scope of while loop:

Chapel do-while loops differ from those found in most other languages in one important regard. If the body of a do-while statement is a block statement and new variables are defined within that block statement, then the scope of those variables extends to cover the loop’s termination expression.

Example (do-while.chpl).

The following example demonstrates that the scope of the variable t includes the loop termination expression.

var i = 0;
do {
  var t = i;
  i += 1;
  writeln(t);
} while (t != 5);

produces the output

0
1
2
3
4
5

The For Loop

The for loop iterates over ranges, domains, arrays, iterators, or any class that implements an iterator named these. The syntax of the for loop is given by:

for-statement:
  'for' index-var-declaration 'in' iteratable-expression 'do' statement
  'for' index-var-declaration 'in' iteratable-expression block-statement
  'for' iteratable-expression 'do' statement
  'for' iteratable-expression block-statement

index-var-declaration:
  identifier
  tuple-grouped-identifier-list

iteratable-expression:
  expression
  'zip' ( expression-list )

The index-var-declaration declares new variables for the scope of the loop. It may specify a new identifier or may specify multiple identifiers grouped using a tuple notation in order to destructure the values returned by the iterator expression, as described in Splitting a Tuple into Multiple Indices of a Loop.

The index-var-declaration is optional and may be omitted if the indices do not need to be referenced in the loop.

If the iteratable-expression begins with the keyword zip followed by a parenthesized expression-list, the listed expressions must support zipper iteration.

Zipper Iteration

When multiple iterators are iterated over in a zipper context, on each iteration, each expression is iterated over, the values are returned by the iterators in a tuple and assigned to the index, and then statement is executed.

The shape of each iterator, the rank and the extents in each dimension, must be identical.

Example (zipper.chpl).

The output of

for (i, j) in zip(1..3, 4..6) do
  write(i, " ", j, " ");

is

1 4 2 5 3 6

Parameter For Loops

Parameter for loops are unrolled by the compiler so that the index variable is a parameter rather than a variable. The syntax for a parameter for loop statement is given by:

param-for-statement:
  'for' 'param' identifier 'in' param-iteratable-expression 'do' statement
  'for' 'param' identifier 'in' param-iteratable-expression block-statement

param-iteratable-expression:
  range-literal
  range-literal 'by' integer-literal

Parameter for loops are restricted to iteration over range literals with an optional by expression where the bounds and stride must be parameters. The loop is then unrolled for each iteration.

The Break, Continue and Label Statements

The break- and continue-statements are used to alter the flow of control within a loop construct. A break-statement causes flow to exit the containing loop and resume with the statement immediately following it. A continue-statement causes control to jump to the end of the body of the containing loop and resume execution from there. By default, break- and continue-statements exit or skip the body of the immediately-containing loop construct.

The label-statement is used to name a specific loop so that break and continue can exit or resume a less-nested loop. Labels can only be attached to for-, while-do- and do-while-statements. When a break statement has a label, execution continues with the first statement following the loop statement with the matching label. When a continue statement has a label, execution continues at the end of the body of the loop with the matching label. If there is no containing loop construct with a matching label, a compile-time error occurs.

The syntax for label, break, and continue statements is given by:

break-statement:
  'break' identifier[OPT] ;

continue-statement:
  'continue' identifier[OPT] ;

label-statement:
  'label' identifier statement

A break statement cannot be used to exit a parallel loop The Forall Statement.

Rationale.

Breaks are not permitted in parallel loops because the execution order of the iterations of parallel loops is not defined.

Note

Future:

We expect to support a eureka concept which would enable one or more tasks to stop the execution of all current and future iterations of the loop.

Example.

In the following code, the index of the first element in each row of A that is equal to findVal is printed. Once a match is found, the continue statement is executed causing the outer loop to move to the next row.

label outer for i in 1..n {
  for j in 1..n {
    if A[i, j] == findVal {
      writeln("index: ", (i, j), " matches.");
      continue outer;
    }
  }
}

The Use Statement

The use statement provides access to the constants in an enumerated type or to the public symbols of a module without the need to use a fully qualified name. When using a module, the statement also ensures that the module symbol itself is visible within the current scope (top-level modules are not otherwise visible without a use).

Use statements can also restrict or rename the set of module symbols that are available within the scope. For further information about use statements, see Using Modules. For more information on enumerated types, please see Enumerated Types. For more information on modules in general, please see Modules.

The Import Statement

The import statement provides one of the two primary ways to access a module’s symbols from outside of the module, the other being the use statement. Import statements make either the module’s name or certain symbols within it available for reference within a given scope. For top-level modules, an import or use statement is required before referring to the module’s name or the symbols it contains within a given lexical scope.

Import statements can also rename the set of symbols that they make available within the scope. For further information about import statements, see Importing Modules.

For more information on modules in general, please see Modules.

The Defer Statement

A defer statement declares a clean-up action to be run when exiting a block. defer is useful because the clean-up action will be run no matter how the block is exited.

The syntax is:

defer-statement:
  'defer' statement

At each place where control flow exits a block, the compiler will add cleanup actions for the in-scope defer statements that have executed and for the local variables that have been initialized in that block.

The cleanup action for a defer statement is to run its body. The cleanup action for a variable is to run its deinitializer. See Variable Lifetimes.

When a block contains multiple defer statements, their cleanup actions will be run in reverse declaration order. Additionally, note that cleanup actions for defer statements may be interleaved among cleanup actions for variables. To understand the interleaving, imagine that the defer statement is declaring and initializing a local variable with a deinitializer that runs the body of the defer statement.

When an iterator contains a defer statement at the top level, the associated clean-up action will be executed when the loop running the iterator exits. defer actions inside a loop body are executed when that iteration completes.

The following program demonstrates a simple use of defer to create an action to be executed when returning from a function:

Example (defer1.chpl).

class Integer {
  var x:int;
}
proc deferInFunction() {
  var c = new unmanaged Integer(1);
  writeln("created ", c);
  defer {
    writeln("defer action: deleting ", c);
    delete c;
  }
  // ... (function body, possibly including return statements)
  // The defer action is executed no matter how this function returns.
}
deferInFunction();

produces the output

created {x = 1}
defer action: deleting {x = 1}

The following example uses a nested block to demonstrate that defer is handled when exiting the block in which it is contained:

Example (defer2.chpl).

class Integer {
  var x:int;
}
proc deferInNestedBlock() {
  var i = 1;
  writeln("before inner block");
  {
    var c = new unmanaged Integer(i);
    writeln("created ", c);
    defer {
      writeln("defer action: deleting ", c);
      delete c;
    }
    writeln("in inner block");
    // note, defer action is executed no matter how this block is exited
  }
  writeln("after inner block");
}
deferInNestedBlock();

produces the output

before inner block
created {x = 1}
in inner block
defer action: deleting {x = 1}
after inner block

The next example shows that when defer is used in a loop, the action will be executed for every loop iteration, whether or not loop body is exited early.

Example (defer3.chpl).

class Integer {
  var x:int;
}
proc deferInLoop() {
  for i in 1..10 {
    var c = new unmanaged Integer(i);
    writeln("created ", c);
    defer {
      writeln("defer action: deleting ", c);
      delete c;
    }
    writeln(c);
    if i == 2 then
      break;
  }
}
deferInLoop();

produces the output

created {x = 1}
{x = 1}
defer action: deleting {x = 1}
created {x = 2}
{x = 2}
defer action: deleting {x = 2}

Lastly, this example shows that defer statements that have not executed have no effect. Only a defer statement that has executed will have its cleanup action run.

Example (defer4.chpl).

proc deferControl(condition: bool) {
  if condition {
    defer {
      writeln("Inside if");
    }
  }
  return;
  defer {
    writeln("After return");
  }
}
writeln("Condition: false");
deferControl(false);
writeln("Condition: true");
deferControl(true);

produces the output

Condition: false
Condition: true
Inside if

The Empty Statement

An empty statement has no effect. The syntax of an empty statement is given by

empty-statement:
  ;